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Purification and characterization of tannin acyl hydrolase from Aspergillus niger MTCC 2425
Author(s) -
Bhardwaj Rita,
Singh Birbal,
Bhat Tej K.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of basic microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.58
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1521-4028
pISSN - 0233-111X
DOI - 10.1002/jobm.200310273
Subject(s) - tannase , methyl gallate , aspergillus niger , chemistry , tannin , chromatography , tannic acid , esterase , polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis , michaelis–menten kinetics , propyl gallate , enzyme , biochemistry , extraction (chemistry) , enzyme assay , gallic acid , food science , organic chemistry , antioxidant
The present investigation was carried out for increasing the yield of tannase of Aspergillus niger and the physico‐chemical characterization of this enzyme. Homogenization and detergent pretreatments did not have any remarkable effect on the extraction of enzyme protein. However, extraction of fungal pigments and proteins was observed to have high pH dependence, and maximum enzyme extraction was obtained at pH 5.5. The two‐step purification protocol gave 51‐fold purified enzyme with a yield of 20%. The total tannase activity was made up of nearly equal activity of esterase and depsidase. Sodium dodecyl sulphate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of purified tannase protein indicated it to be made up of two polypeptides of molecular weight 102 and 83 kDa. Based on the Michaelis‐Menten constant ( K m ) of tannase for three substrates tested, tannic acid was the best substrate with K m of 2.8 × 10 −4 M , followed by methyl gallate and propyl gallate. The inhibition was maximum for CaCl 2 (58%) whereas EDTA had no modulatory effect on tannase activity. The inhibitor binding constant ( K I ) of CaCl 2 was 5.9 × 10 −4 M and the inhibition was of noncompetitive type.