Abstract

This study aims to determine the enzymatic activity of extracellular alkaline protease from Bacillus cereus TD5B and its potential application as a sheep skin dehairing agent. The B. cereus TD5B was screened for extracellular alkaline protease production on skim milk agar media, while its alkaline protease activity and the application were measured at 1%, 1.5%, and 2%. The application of alkaline protease from B. cereus TD5B as a sheep skin dehairing agent was observed through histological examination and physical properties measurement after chrome-tanning with lime and Na2S as control. The study was conducted in a completely randomized design, and the quantitative data were analyzed using Duncan's Multiple Range Test. The results showed that a clear zone was seen surrounding B. cereus, indicating the bacteria's proteolytic activity. The protease activity measurement showed that 2% of alkaline protease had the highest enzymatic activity at 144.75 U/mL/min. The highest tensile strength of sheep leather was obtained after dehairing at 1% alkaline protease concentration (350.26 kg/cm2), even though the highest elongation was obtained at 2% (34.92%). In contrast, different concentrations showed similar shrinkage temperatures at 90°C. This study concludes that the optimum alkaline protease concentration from Bacillus cereus TD5B as a sheep dehairing agent was 2%.

Details

Title
ENZYMATIC ACTIVITY OF ALKALINE PROTEASE FROM Bacillus cereus TD5B AND ITS APPLICATION AS SHEEP SKIN DEHAIRING AGENT
Author
Nanung Agus FITRIYANTO; MUSTHOFIYAH; MUHLISIN; PERTIWININGRUM, Ambar; KURNIAWATI, Novita; Ragil Adi PRASETYO; AZKARAHMAN, Aldyon Restu; ERWANTO, Yuny
Pages
105-118
Publication year
2021
Publication date
2021
Publisher
The National Research & Development Institute for Textiles and Leather - INCDTP
ISSN
15834433
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2561238596
Copyright
© 2021. This work is licensed under https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.