• Title/Summary/Keyword: protease activities

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Studies on the Enzyme Activities of Rhizopus distributed in South Korea(1) - On the amylase, protease and cellulase activities- (한국산 Rhizopus의 효소활성에 관한 연구 (第 1 報) - Amylase, protease 및 cellulase 활성에 관하여-)

  • 이영녹;윤경하;이평우;배광승;박용근;정성균;서항원
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.49-49
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    • 1976
  • Enzyme activities, such as glucoamylase dextrinogenic amylase, cellulase, acid protase and neutral protease, of Rhizopus isolated from various substrates collected throughout South Korea are measured, and their enzyme activities are surveyed from taxonomical, ecological and physiological viewpoint. Effect of carbon sources and phytohormones on the amylalse production of Rhizopus are also measured. Among the 735 strains of Phizopus isolated, strain number 587 exhibiting most prominent dextrinogenic amylase and netral protease activity is selected as the best strain, and the strain number 673, 108, 329, 165 and 728 are seleted for their predominant cellulase, acid protease, glucoamylase, dextrinogenic amylase and neutral protease activities, respectively. R.acidus and R.nigricans which exhibited relatively higher callulalse activity, showed lower activities for both amylase. R.tritici exhibited higher protease activity. The relations between activities and various substrates of wild strains are not outstnading difference, although the strains isolated from inland region exhibited more or less higher amylase and cellulase activities, than those of coast region, generally. Lactose and dextrin are most effective carbon sources for glucoamylase and dextrinogenic amylase production of the Rhizopus niveus, respectively. Although all phytohormones tested are effective for production of amylase by the Rhizopus strains, except nicotinamide for glucoamylase production, biotin and ascorbate are most effective for dextrinogenic amylase and glucoamylase production, respectively.

Studies on the Enzyme Activities of Rhizopus distributed in South Korea(1) - On the amylase, protease and cellulase activities- (한국산 Rhizopus의 효소활성에 관한 연구 (第 1 報) - Amylase, protease 및 cellulase 활성에 관하여-)

  • 이영녹;윤경하;이평우;배광승;박용근;정성균;서항원
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.47-56
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    • 1976
  • Enzyme activities, such as glucoamylase dextrinogenic amylase, cellulase, acid protase and neutral protease, of Rhizopus isolated from various substrates collected throughout South Korea are measured, and their enzyme activities are surveyed from taxonomical, ecological and physiological viewpoint. Effect of carbon sources and phytohormones on the amylalse production of Rhizopus are also measured. Among the 735 strains of Phizopus isolated, strain number 587 exhibiting most prominent dextrinogenic amylase and netral protease activity is selected as the best strain, and the strain number 673, 108, 329, 165 and 728 are seleted for their predominant cellulase, acid protease, glucoamylase, dextrinogenic amylase and neutral protease activities, respectively. R.acidus and R.nigricans which exhibited relatively higher callulalse activity, showed lower activities for both amylase. R.tritici exhibited higher protease activity. The relations between activities and various substrates of wild strains are not outstnading difference, although the strains isolated from inland region exhibited more or less higher amylase and cellulase activities, than those of coast region, generally. Lactose and dextrin are most effective carbon sources for glucoamylase and dextrinogenic amylase production of the Rhizopus niveus, respectively. Although all phytohormones tested are effective for production of amylase by the Rhizopus strains, except nicotinamide for glucoamylase production, biotin and ascorbate are most effective for dextrinogenic amylase and glucoamylase production, respectively.

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Inhibitory Activities of Korean Plants on HIV-1 Protease

  • Min, Byung-Sun;Bae, Ki-Hwan;Kim, Young-Ho;Shimotohno, Kunitada;Miyashiro, Hirotsugu;Hattori, Masao
    • Natural Product Sciences
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    • v.4 no.4
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    • pp.241-244
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    • 1998
  • For the development of anti-AIDS agents, thirty-seven methanol extracts of Korean plant materials were tested for their inhibitory effects on human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) protease. Extracts of seven plants showed more than 30% inhibitory activities on HIV-1 protease at a concentration of $100\;{\mu}g/ml$. The bark of Berchemia berchemiaefolia, the leaf of Lindera erythrocarpa and the whole plant of Siegesbeckia pubescens exhibited significant inhibititory activities on HIV-1 protease with 56.2, 50.8, and 46.6%, respectively.

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Virulence of Environmental Urease-Positive and Kanagawa Phenomenon-Negative Vibrio parahaemolyticus

  • Park, Mi-Yeon
    • Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.330-336
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    • 2004
  • Fifty-two pathogenic Vibrio parahaemolyticus strains were isolated from the environments of Busan and Yeosu, Korea. Forty-three of these strains showed protease activities, whereas 4 strains showed $\alpha / \beta$ hemolysin activities and 6 strains had urease activities. Their pathogenic factors were not overlapping except one strain, which had both protease and hemolysin activities. The 6 urease-positive strains (V. parahaemolyticus YKB4, YKB14, S25, YFB20, YFO21, and YFO22) showed the same biochemical characteristics as a reference strain [V. parahaemolyticus KCTC 2471 (urease-negative)], except for urease production. The 6 urease-positive strains showed different urease activities in their culture supernatant during the growth. The urease activity of S25 increased sharply at the late exponential phase, and was the highest at the initial stationary phase and was kept until the late stationary phase. The other 5 isolates, except C25, showed urease activities at the mid-stationary phase and increased steadily until the late stationary phase, when the urease activity was maximal. To compare the degree of virulence of V. parahaemolyticus with different pathogenic factors, hemolysin, protease, or urease-positive strains were injected into groups of 10 each of ICR mice (7- to l0-week-old males). The lethal rates of urease-positive V. parahaemolyticus, YKB14, YKB4, and S25, were significantly high, being 50, 70, and 80%, respectively. Protease-positive V. parahaemolyticus strains FM39 and FM50 showed 40% and 60% of lethal rate, respectively. Hemolysin-positive V. parahaemolyticus strains S34 and S72 had no mortality, similar to nonpathogenic V. parahaemolyticus FM12.

Effects of Gamma Irradiation on the Hydrolytic Enzyme Activities of Korean Soybean-Based Fermented Food (감마선 조사가 장류제품의 가수분해효소 활성에 미치는 영향)

  • 김동호;손준호;육홍선;김미리;차보숙;변명우
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.30 no.5
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    • pp.839-843
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    • 2001
  • The effect of gamma-irradiation on the hydrolytic enzyme activities of some Koran soybean-based fermented foods was studied. Doenjang (soybean paste), kanjang (soy sauce), kochujang (red pepper paste), chungkukjang and meju were prepared and irradiated at 0, 5, 10 and 20 kGy. Then activities of protease, amylase, lipase and fibrinolytic enzyme were determined. Hydrolytic enzyme activities of meju, chungkukjang and doenjang were relatively higher than those of kanjang and kochujang. Amylase, protease and lipase activities were not affected by 10 kGy and were slightly (about 10%) inactivated by 20 kGy of gamma irradiation, with no statistical significance. Fibrinolytic enzyme was stable in all treatments.

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Changes in activities of protease, phenoloxidase and cellulase during mycelium growth of Pleurotus ostreatus in sawdust cultures (톱밥배양한 느타리버섯 균사생장시 생산되는 각종 효소변화)

  • Chang, Hyun-You;Kim, Gwang-Po;Cha, Dong-Yeul
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.24 no.2 s.77
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    • pp.149-154
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    • 1996
  • Effects of various kinds of sawdusts, supplements and culture conditions on activities of several enzymes such as protease, phenoloxidase and cellulase produced from mycelium of P. ostreatus grown on sawdust medium were studied and the results are as follows; Higher specific activity of these enzymes was observed when oak tree sawdust and poplar tree sawdust were supplemented with rice bran or wheat bran at rate of 30%, 20% and 10% in total volume respectively. Higher total activities of protease, phenoloxidase and cellulase were observed at 70% of the moisture contents of culture media, while lower activity of these enzymes was observed with 40% moisture contents of sawdust culture medium. The pH 4 and 9 of the sawdust media appeared to be optimum pH for the. production of protease while pH 5 and 7 were optimal for the production of phenoloxidase. The pH 6 of the sawdust medium was optimal for the production of cellulase. The optimum incubating temperature for the production of protease, phenoloxidase and cellulase was $25^{\circ}C$. Higher total activities of protease and phenoloxidase were observed when culture medium was added with wood vinegar at the control, and 0.5% for cellulase.

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Pathogenic Factors of Vibrio spp. Isolated from Seawater of Gwangan Beach in Busan

  • Park Mi-Yeon;Kim Hyun-Jin;Choi Seung-Tae;Oh Eun-Gyong;Chang Dong-Suck
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.5 no.3
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    • pp.178-182
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    • 2002
  • The authors identified 68 Vibrio strains from Gwangan beach seawater from June to October in 2001. We identified them as 19 strains of Vibrio alginolyticus, 15 strains of V. vulnificus, 15 strains of V. parahaemolyticus, 11 strains of V. cholerae non O1, 7 strains of V. fluvialis and just one strain of V. hollisae. They showed their typical biochemical characteristics by API 20E kit (bioMerieux), respectively. It was examined whether their cultural supernatants had enzymatic activities such as hemolysin, protease or urease. The 46 strains showed hemolytic activities and/or protease activities. But we could not find any strain which had urease activity. All isolates of V. cholerae non O1 showed $\beta$ hemolysis. The others showed $\alpha$ hemolysis or did not show clear zones on sheep blood agar plates. These results of Kanagawa phenomenon were not always correspondant with hemolytic activities of cultural supernatants at late log phase. Some strains had higher hemolytic activities despite of showing protease activities on skim milk agar plates and in litmus milk media. On the other hand, some strains showed protease activities but did not show hemolytic activities. Therefore we could guess that there were the relationships between hemolysins and proteases produced by pathogenic vibrios.

Screening for Cold-Active Protease-Producing Bacteria from the Culture Collection of Polar Microorganisms and Characterization of Proteolytic Activities (남북극 유래 저온성 박테리아 Culture Collection에서 저온활성 프로테아제 생산균주의 스크리닝과 효소 특성)

  • Kim, Doc-Kyu;Park, Ha-Ju;Lee, Yung-Mi;Hong, Soon-Gyu;Lee, Hong-Kum;Yim, Joung-Han
    • Korean Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.46 no.1
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    • pp.73-79
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    • 2010
  • The Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI) has assembled a culture collection of cold-adapted bacterial strains from both the Arctic and Antarctic. To identify excellent protease-producers among the proteolytic bacterial collection (874 strains), 78 strains were selected in advance according to their relative activities and were subsequently re-examined for their extracellular protease activity on $0.1{\times}$ ZoBell plates supplemented with 1% skim milk at various temperatures. This rapid and direct screening method permitted the selection of a small group of 15 cold-adapted bacterial strains, belonging to either the genus Pseudoalteromonas (13 strains) or Flavobacterium (2 strains), that showed proteolytic activities at temperatures ranging between $5-15^{\circ}C$. The cold-active proteases from these strains were classified into four categories (serine protease, aspartic protease, cysteine protease, and metalloprotease) according to the extent of enzymatic inhibition by a class-specific protease inhibitor. Since highly active and/or cold-adapted proteases have the potential for industrial or commercial enzyme development, the protease-producing bacteria selected in this work will be studied as a valuable natural source of new proteases. Our results also highlight the relevance of the Antarctic for the isolation of protease-producing bacteria active at low temperatures.

Changes in Enzyme Acrivities of Salted Chinese cabbage and Kimchi during Salting and Fermentation (배추의 소금절임과 김치숙성 중 효소류의 활성변화)

  • 오영애;김순동
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.404-410
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    • 1997
  • Amylase, protease, polygalacturonase and $\beta$-galactosidase activities were monitored during salting of Chinese cabbage and kimchi fermentation at 1$0^{\circ}C$. A part of enzymes in the tissue of Chinese cabbage were eluted during salting, and other remained enzymes activities were decreased in proportion to the amount of elution. But total enzyme activities were increased during salting. Amylase, protease and polygalacturonase activities decreased at the early fermentation stage but increased at the late fermentation stage. $\beta$-Galactosidase activity was continuously increased during all periods of fermentation. Enzymic actions at the early fermentation stage come from Chinese cabbge and at the late fermentation stage come from major microorganisms in kimchi fermentation. Kimchi fermentation involves the activation of the enzymes by salting; hydrolysis of micromoleculars such as polysaccarides cell wall composed polysaccarides and proteins of cell wall during early fermentation of kimchi; overripening of the kimchi caused by propagation of homofermentative lactic acid bacteria which demand autotroph.

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The Synergistic Action of the AL-Protease from Arthrobacter luteus on the Lysis of Yeast Cell Walls (Arthrobacter luteus가 생산하는 AL-Protease의 효모세포벽 용해 촉진작용)

  • Oh, Hong-Rock;Funatsu, Masaru
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.401-408
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    • 1985
  • The yeast cell wall lytic action of the alkaline AL-protease, which was found out of the crude Zymolyase that a kind of yeast cell wall lytic $endo-{\beta}-1$, 3-glucanase produced from Arthrobacter luteus, was investigated with the viable cells of S. sake and it's cell wall preparation. AL-protease on the lysis of the viable yeast cells showed very low activities with the alone, but the lytic activities were highly increased with the combination of AL-protease and Zymolyase. On the stepwise treatment of the viable yeast cells with AL-protease and Zymolyase, the cells were lysed highly only by the course having a treatment with Zymolyase after pretreatment with AL-protease. Thus synergistic action of AL-protease was not observed with any some commercial enzymes, known as a type of alkaline and serine protease such as AL-protease, and was also found to be affected greatly by the culture conditions and species of the yeast tested. AL-protease caused the release of some peptide and a lot of sugar from the cell wall preparation, but could not lysed the cell wall more than 66%. Whereas Zymolyase could lysed the cell walls almost completely with alone. On the basis of these results, the synergistic action of AL-protease on the lysis of S. sake cells is hypothesized that at first AL-protease bind to the yeast cell surface layer consisting of mannan and protein, and then changes their conformation to facilitate the penetration of Zymolyase from the outside to the inside framework layer constituted of alkali insoluble ${\beta}-1,\;3-glucan$.

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