Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation

Tannase (Tannin Acyl Hydrolase EC 3.1.1.20) is an industrial inducible enzyme capable of hydrolyzing hydrolyzable tannin ester linkage gallotannin and ellagitannin, producing gallic acid and glucose. Tannase is extensively used in the pharmaceutical, chemical, cosmetics, textile, leather, food, feed...

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發表在:International Journal on Advanced Science, Engineering and Information Technology
主要作者: 2-s2.0-85110415405
格式: Article
語言:English
出版: Insight Society 2021
在線閱讀:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85110415405&doi=10.18517%2fijaseit.11.3.13045&partnerID=40&md5=00c446f413e43234dc0f031f16f5f9b4
id Ramli M.S.; Siva R.; Rashid N.Y.A.; Sharifuddin S.A.; Samat N.; Hasibuan S.; Lani M.N.; Mansor A.
spelling Ramli M.S.; Siva R.; Rashid N.Y.A.; Sharifuddin S.A.; Samat N.; Hasibuan S.; Lani M.N.; Mansor A.
2-s2.0-85110415405
Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
2021
International Journal on Advanced Science, Engineering and Information Technology
11
3
10.18517/ijaseit.11.3.13045
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85110415405&doi=10.18517%2fijaseit.11.3.13045&partnerID=40&md5=00c446f413e43234dc0f031f16f5f9b4
Tannase (Tannin Acyl Hydrolase EC 3.1.1.20) is an industrial inducible enzyme capable of hydrolyzing hydrolyzable tannin ester linkage gallotannin and ellagitannin, producing gallic acid and glucose. Tannase is extensively used in the pharmaceutical, chemical, cosmetics, textile, leather, food, feed, and beverage industries. In the beverage industry, tannase is used as a clarifying agent to clarify tannin present in coffee, coffee-flavored soft drinks, tea, and fruit juices by removing phenolic compounds. In the pharmaceutical industry, tannase is used to produce gallic acid, an intermediary compound in the production of antibacterial drug, trimethoprim, while in the food industry, tannase is used to synthesize crucial antioxidant food preservative propyl gallate (3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoate). Most of the tannase production utilizes bacteria such as Bacillus sp. as tannase producer under submerged fermentation, SmF. Despite the immense industrial potential of tannase, it has not fully been exploited due to lack of knowledge, and fewer studies reported filamentous fungi for tannase production. This study aimed to screen potential tannase-producing fungi from various agri-industrial by-products such as rice by-products, spent tea, spent coffee ground, banana peels, mango peels, desiccated coconut residue, soybean residue, sweet potato peels, and onions. Fungal isolate, J1 (Aspergillus niger) was identified as the efficient tannase-producing fungus due to the hydrolytic zone's largest diameter (60.7 ± 0.6) mm. It achieved high tannase activity with (6.86 ± 0.04) U/ml in submerged fermentation, SmF. In conclusion, filamentous fungi isolated from agriindustrial by-products have huge potential as an efficient tannase producer. © 2021. All Rights Reserved.
Insight Society
20885334
English
Article

author 2-s2.0-85110415405
spellingShingle 2-s2.0-85110415405
Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
author_facet 2-s2.0-85110415405
author_sort 2-s2.0-85110415405
title Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
title_short Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
title_full Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
title_fullStr Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
title_full_unstemmed Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
title_sort Screening of Potential Tannase-producing Fungi from Local Agri-industrial By-products using a Plate Assay and Submerged Fermentation
publishDate 2021
container_title International Journal on Advanced Science, Engineering and Information Technology
container_volume 11
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.18517/ijaseit.11.3.13045
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85110415405&doi=10.18517%2fijaseit.11.3.13045&partnerID=40&md5=00c446f413e43234dc0f031f16f5f9b4
description Tannase (Tannin Acyl Hydrolase EC 3.1.1.20) is an industrial inducible enzyme capable of hydrolyzing hydrolyzable tannin ester linkage gallotannin and ellagitannin, producing gallic acid and glucose. Tannase is extensively used in the pharmaceutical, chemical, cosmetics, textile, leather, food, feed, and beverage industries. In the beverage industry, tannase is used as a clarifying agent to clarify tannin present in coffee, coffee-flavored soft drinks, tea, and fruit juices by removing phenolic compounds. In the pharmaceutical industry, tannase is used to produce gallic acid, an intermediary compound in the production of antibacterial drug, trimethoprim, while in the food industry, tannase is used to synthesize crucial antioxidant food preservative propyl gallate (3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoate). Most of the tannase production utilizes bacteria such as Bacillus sp. as tannase producer under submerged fermentation, SmF. Despite the immense industrial potential of tannase, it has not fully been exploited due to lack of knowledge, and fewer studies reported filamentous fungi for tannase production. This study aimed to screen potential tannase-producing fungi from various agri-industrial by-products such as rice by-products, spent tea, spent coffee ground, banana peels, mango peels, desiccated coconut residue, soybean residue, sweet potato peels, and onions. Fungal isolate, J1 (Aspergillus niger) was identified as the efficient tannase-producing fungus due to the hydrolytic zone's largest diameter (60.7 ± 0.6) mm. It achieved high tannase activity with (6.86 ± 0.04) U/ml in submerged fermentation, SmF. In conclusion, filamentous fungi isolated from agriindustrial by-products have huge potential as an efficient tannase producer. © 2021. All Rights Reserved.
publisher Insight Society
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language English
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