Solid-state production of polygalacturonase by Aspergillus sojae ATCC 20235
The effect of solid substrates, inoculum and incubation time were studied using response surface methodology (RSM) for the production of polygalacturonase enzyme and spores in solid-state fermentation using Aspergillus sojae ATCC 20235. Two-stage optimization procedure was applied using D-optimal an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of biotechnology 2007, Vol.127 (2), p.322-334 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The effect of solid substrates, inoculum and incubation time were studied using response surface methodology (RSM) for the production of polygalacturonase enzyme and spores in solid-state fermentation using
Aspergillus sojae ATCC 20235. Two-stage optimization procedure was applied using D-optimal and face-centered central composite design (CCD). Crushed maize was chosen as the solid substrate, for maximum polygalacturonase enzyme activity based on D-optimal design. Inoculum and incubation time were determined to have significant effect on enzyme activity and total spore (
p
<
0.01) based on the results of CCD. A second order polynomial regression model was fitted and was found adequate for individual responses. All two models provided an adequate
R
2 of 0.9963 (polygalacturonase) and 0.9806 (spores) (
p
<
0.001). The individual optimum values of inoculum and incubation time for maximum production of the two responses were 2
×
10
7 total spores and 5–6 days. The predicted enzyme activity (30.55
U/g
solid) and spore count (2.23
×
10
7
spore/ml) were very close to the actual values obtained experimentally (29.093
U/g
solid and 2.31
×
10
7
spore/ml, respectively). The overall optimum region considering the two responses together, overlayed with the individual optima. Solid-state fermentation provided 48% more polygalacturonase activity compared to submerged fermentation under individually optimized conditions. |
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ISSN: | 0168-1656 1873-4863 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2006.07.010 |