Extraction, purification, and investigation of the antibacterial potential of lysozyme isolated from the latex of Calotropis procera

Calotropis procera produces a latex used in traditional medicine because of its components which are found to be biologically active. The latex of C. procera has many benefits such as pain reduction, antimicrobial attitude and other precious attributes. Latex lysozyme (LL) is a particular protein co...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:European food research & technology 2024-05, Vol.250 (5), p.1401-1416
Hauptverfasser: Muthu, Sakthivel, Gopal, Venkateshbabu, AL-Younis, Zena Kadhim, Altemimi, Ammar B., Perumal, Palani, Lakshmikanthan, Mythileeswari, Krishnan, Kathiravan, Najm, Mazin A. A., Giuffrè, Angelo Maria, Govindan, Lakshmanan
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Calotropis procera produces a latex used in traditional medicine because of its components which are found to be biologically active. The latex of C. procera has many benefits such as pain reduction, antimicrobial attitude and other precious attributes. Latex lysozyme (LL) is a particular protein contained in C. procera plant having a promising antibacterial property. The process applied for extraction implicated ammonium sulfate precipitation, water extraction, ion exchange and gel filtration column chromatography evidencing 14.4 kDa for LL as a molecular mass. LL after purification showed 397.18 U mg −1 as specific activity (10.30 purification fold), and with 37.9% as a yield. In addition, the chemical and physical analyses showed that LL had its best realization when the pH was 5.5 at 50 °C. Moreover when metal ions such as Ca 2+ and Mg 2+ were incorporated the relative activity of the enzyme resulted ampliflied. When a purification was conducted with CM-Cellulose and Sephadex G-100 chromatography, LL revealed an antibacterial property versus both Escherichia coli (MICs 14 µg ml −1 ) and Bacillus cereus (MICs 13 µg ml −1 ). HR-TEM analysis displayed an antimicrobial potential of LL after its purification; that analysis showed the deterioration of the cell wall (external membrane of the cell) of both E. coli and B. cereus . Therefore, the LL obtained from C. procera maintains ability as an antibacterial enzyme applicable in various domains such as biotechnological and pharmaceutical industries. Graphical abstract
ISSN:1438-2377
1438-2385
DOI:10.1007/s00217-024-04467-2