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Abstract

Chitin deacetylase (CDA) is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of acetamine groups of N-acetyl-d-glucosamine in chitin, converting it to chitosan in fungal cell walls. In the present study, the activity in batch culture of CDA from six Mucoralean strains, two of them wild type, isolated from dung of herbivores of Northeast Brazil, was screened. Among the strains tested, Cunninghamella bertholletiae IFM 46114 showed a high intracellular enzyme activity of 0.075 U/mg protein after 5 days of culture, and a wild-type strain of Mucor circinelloides showed a high intracellular enzyme activity of 0.060 U/mg protein, with only 2 days of culture, using N-acetylchitopentaose as substrate. This enzyme showed optimal activity at pH 4.5 in 25 mM glutamate-sodium buffer at 50°C, and was stable over 1 h preincubation at the same temperature. The kinetic parameters of CDA did not follow Michaelis-Menten kinetics, but rather Hill affinity distribution, showing probable allosteric behavior. The apparent K^sub HILL^ and V^sub max^ of CDA were 288±34 nmol/l and 0.08±0.01 U mg protein^sup -1^ min^sup -1^, respectively, using N-acetylchitopentaose as substrate at pH 4.5 at 50°C.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Screening of chitin deacetylase from Mucoralean strains (Zygomycetes) and its relationship to cell growth rate
Author
Amorim, R V; S; Ledingham, W M; Fukushima, K; Campos-takaki, G M
Pages
19-23
Publication year
2005
Publication date
Jan 2005
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISSN
13675435
e-ISSN
14765535
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
845873911
Copyright
Society for Industrial Microbiology 2005