4.3 Article

Effects of temperature on extracellular hydrolase enzymes from soil microfungi

Journal

POLAR BIOLOGY
Volume 41, Issue 3, Pages 537-551

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00300-017-2215-z

Keywords

Amylase; Cellulase; Soil microfungi; Arctic; Antarctic; Tropical

Funding

  1. University of Malaya [RP007-2012C, PG041-2013A]
  2. Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation [Flagship GA006-2014FL]
  3. HiCOE [IOES-2014G]
  4. Yayasan Penyelidikan Antartika Sultan Mizan
  5. UM
  6. NERC
  7. NERC [bas0100036] Funding Source: UKRI

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Soil microbes play important roles in global carbon and nutrient cycling. Soil microfungi are generally amongst the most important contributors. They produce various extracellular hydrolase enzymes that break down the complex organic molecules in the soil into simpler form. In this study, we investigated patterns of amylase and cellulase (which are responsible for breaking down starch and cellulose, respectively) relative activity (RA) on solid media at different culture temperatures in fungal strains from Arctic, Antarctic and tropical soils. Fungal isolates from all three regions were inoculated onto R2A media supplemented with starch for amylase and carboxymethylcellulose and trypan blue for cellulase screening. The isolates were then incubated at 4, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35 and 40 A degrees C and examined for activity after 5 and 10 days, for tropical and polar isolates, respectively. The data obtained indicate that the polar fungal strains exhibited similar patterns of amylase and cellulase RA. Both Arctic and Antarctic fungi showed highest RA for amylase and cellulase at 35 A degrees C, while colony growth was maximised at 15 A degrees C. Colony growth and RA of the polar isolates were negatively correlated suggesting that, as temperatures increase, the cells become stressed and have fewer resources available to invest in growth. Unlike polar isolates, tropical isolates did not exhibit any trend of colony growth with temperature, rather having idiosyncratic patterns in each isolate. The low enzyme production and RA levels in the tropical strains may suggest both a low ability to respond to temperature variation in their natural thermally stable tropical habitats, as well as a level of thermal stress limiting their enzyme production ability.

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