Abstract

Background

Tannase is an enzyme that catalyses the breakdown of ester bonds in gallotannins such as tannic acid. In recent years, the interest on bacterial tannases has increased because of its wide applications. The lactic acid bacteria (LAB) plays an important role in food tannin biotransformation, it has the ability of hydrolyse tannins in ruminants intestine. The finding of tannin hydrolysis by LAB has sparked their use as tannase producer.

Results

The bacterial strains used in the present work were identified as Bacillus subtilis AM1 and Lactobacillus plantarum CIR1. The maximal tannase production levels were 1400 and 1239 U/L after 32 and 36 h of fermentation respectively, for B. subtilis AM1 and L. plantarum CIR1. Maximum gallic acid release was 24.16 g/L for B. subtilis AM1 and 23.73 g/L for L. plantarum CIR1. HPLC analysis showed the formation of another peaks in the retention time range of 9-14 min, which could be attributed to the formation of di or tri-galloyl glucose.

Conclusions

According to database, the strains were identified as Bacillus subtilis AM1 and Lactobacillus plantarum CIR1. In conclusion, both strains had the capability to produce good titres of extracellular tannase and release gallic acid.

Details

Title
Gallic acid production under anaerobic submerged fermentation by two bacilli strains
Author
Aguilar-Zarate, Pedro; Cruz, Mario A; Montanez, Julio; Rodriguez-Herrera, Raul; Wong-Paz, Jorge E; Belmares, Ruth E; Aguilar, Cristobal N
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14752859
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1779609618
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2015