
Purification of Wickerhamomyces anomalus Keratinase and Its Prospective Application in Poultry Feed Industries
Author(s) -
Ayandiran Aina,
C. O Ezeamagu,
Sherifat Tolulope Akindele,
Abimbola O. Aleshinloye
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
fountain journal of natural and applied sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2350-1863
DOI - 10.53704/fujnas.v10i1.345
Subject(s) - keratinase , food science , chemistry , agar , enzyme assay , solid state fermentation , fermentation , skimmed milk , biology , enzyme , bacteria , biochemistry , genetics
Animal wastes emanating from cow horns, hooves and feathers are keratinous in nature which can only be degraded by keratinolytic microorganisms. Consequently, the pollution resulting from the accumulation of these wastes in response to growing livestock demand is posing a significant threat to human health and the environment. This study was carried out using cow hooves as the substrate for the production of keratinase from fungal identified as Wickerhamomyces anomalus 9 (18S rDNA gene sequencing) was isolated from soil rich hooves using basal salt agar medium and potato dextrose agar. The keratinase of the isolate was assessed using skim milk agar and the enzyme was produced by solid-state fermentation. The crude enzyme was purified using ammonium sulphate precipitation, ion exchange and gel-filtration chromatography. The specific activity of the enzyme was 0.29 U/mg with a yield of 45% and a 7.25 purification fold. The optimal pH and temperature of the enzyme were 8.0 and 60 oC respectively. The enzyme was observed to be thermo-stable at 50oC between for 30 minutes. The kinetics revealed that the Vmax was 0.384U/min with Km 86.95mg/ml. The native molecular weight of the enzyme was found to be 34KDa. There were significant differences at 95% confidence with poultry feed treated with Wickerhamomyces anomalus keratinase in moisture, ash content, crude fibre, crude fat, nitrogen content, crude protein and carbohydrate compare to the untreated feed. These results suggest an environment-friendly approach for biodegradation of cow hooves wastes for the production of keratinases, animal waste management as well as a promising tool for chicken feed additives.Keywords: Biodegradation, Chromatography, Cow hooves, Keratinase, Pollution