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Publication Details
AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS
SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH
Biochemical and Molecular Characterization of a Serine Keratinase from Brevibacillus brevis US575 with Promising Keratin-Biodegradation and Hide-Dehairing Activities
PLoS ONE, Volume 8, No. 10, Article e76722, Year 2013
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Description
Dehairing is one of the highly polluting operations in the leather industry. The conventional lime-sulfide process used for dehairing produces large amounts of sulfide, which poses serious toxicity and disposal problems. This operation also involves hair destruction, a process that leads to increased chemical oxygen demand (COD), biological oxygen demand (BOD), and total suspended solid (TSS) loads in the effluent. With these concerns in mind, enzyme-assisted dehairing has often been proposed as an alternative method. The main enzyme preparations so far used involved keratinases. The present paper reports on the purification of an extracellular keratinase (KERUS) newly isolated from Brevibacillus brevis strain US575. Matrix assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF/MS) analysis revealed that the purified enzyme was a monomer with a molecular mass of 29121.11 Da. The sequence of the 27 N-terminal residues of KERUS showed high homology with those of Bacillus keratinases. Optimal activity was achieved at pH 8 and 40°C. Its thermoactivity and thermostability were upgraded in the presence of 5 mM Ca2+. The enzyme was completely inhibited by phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) and diiodopropyl fluorophosphates (DFP), which suggests that it belongs to the serine protease family. KERUS displayed higher levels of hydrolysis, substrate specificity, and catalytic efficiency than NUE 12 MG and KOROPON® MK EG keratinases. The enzyme also exhibited powerful keratinolytic activity that made it able to accomplish the entire feather-biodegradation process on its own. The kerUS gene encoding KERUS was cloned, sequenced, and expressed in Escherichia coli. The biochemical properties of the extracellular purified recombinant enzyme (rKERUS) were similar to those of native KERUS. Overall, the findings provide strong support for the potential candidacy of this enzyme as an effective and eco-friendly alternative to the conventional chemicals used for the dehairing of rabbit, goat, sheep and bovine hides in the leather processing industry. © 2013 Jaouadi et al.
Authors & Co-Authors
Jaouadi, Nadia Zaraî
Tunisia, Sfax
University of Sfax
Rekik, Hatem
Tunisia, Sfax
University of Sfax
Badis, Abdelmalek
Algeria, Blida
Université Blida 1
Algeria, Bou Ismail
Centre National de Recherche et de Développement de la Pêche et de L'aquaculture
Trabelsi, Sahar
Tunisia, Sfax
University of Sfax
Belhoul, Mouna
Tunisia, Sfax
University of Sfax
Yahiaoui, Amina Benkiar
Algeria, Bou Ismail
Centre National de Recherche et de Développement de la Pêche et de L'aquaculture
Aicha, Houda Ben
Tunisia, Mégrine, Ben Arous
National Leather and Shoe Center Cncc
Toumi, Abdessatar
Tunisia, Mégrine, Ben Arous
National Leather and Shoe Center Cncc
Bejar, S.
Tunisia, Sfax
University of Sfax
Jaouadi, Bassem
Tunisia, Sfax
University of Sfax
Statistics
Citations: 131
Authors: 10
Affiliations: 4
Identifiers
Doi:
10.1371/journal.pone.0076722
e-ISSN:
19326203
Research Areas
Genetics And Genomics