4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Partial purification of saccharifying and cell wall-hydrolyzing enzymes from malt in waste from beer fermentation broth

Journal

BIOPROCESS AND BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Volume 36, Issue 6, Pages 737-747

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00449-013-0899-1

Keywords

Cell wall-hydrolyzing enzymes; Waste from beer fermentation broth; Cell matrix; Bioethanol; Cell-free enzyme system

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A number of hydrolyzing enzymes that are secreted from malt during brewing, including cell wall-hydrolyzing, saccharide-hydrolyzing, protein-degrading, lipid-hydrolyzing, and polyphenol and thiol-hydrolyzing enzymes, are expected to exist in an active form in waste from beer fermentation broth (WBFB). In this study, the existence of these enzymes was confirmed by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, after which enzyme extract was partially purified through a series of purification steps. The hydrolyzing enzyme activity was then measured under various conditions at each purification step using carboxymethyl cellulose as a substrate. The best hydrolyzing activities of partially purified enzymes were found at pH 4.5 and 50 degrees C in a citrate buffer system. The enzymes showed highest thermal stability at 30 degrees C when exposed for prolonged time. As the temperature increased gradually from 25 to 70 degrees C, yeast cells in the chemically defined medium with enzyme extract lost their cell wall and viability earlier than those without enzyme extract. Cell wall degradation and the release of cell matrix into the culture media at elevated temperature (45-70 degrees C) in the presence of enzyme extract were monitored through microscopic pictures. Saccharification enzymes from malt were relatively more active in the original WBFB than supernatant and diluted sediments. The presence of hydrolyzing enzymes from malt in WBFB is expected to play a role in bioethanol production using simultaneous saccharification and fermentation without the need for additional enzymes, nutrients, or microbial cells via a cell-free enzyme system.

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