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One-step purification and immobilization of his-tagged rhamnosidase for naringin hydrolysis

journal contribution
posted on 2010-04-01, 00:00 authored by Munish Puri, A Kaur, R Singh, W Schwarz
α-l-Rhamnosidase (EC 3.2.1.40) is an enzyme that catalyzes the cleavage of terminal rhamnoside groups from naringin to prunin and rhamnose. In this study, a His-tag was genetically attached to the rhamnosidase gene <i>ram</i>A from <i>Clostridium stercorarium </i>to facilitate its purification from <i>Escherichia coli </i>BL21 (DE3) cells containing the pET-21d/ramA plasmid. Immobilized metal-chelate affinity chromatography (IMAC) resulted in one-step purification of N-terminally His-tagged recombinant rhamnosidase (N-His-CsRamA) which was immobilized in Ca<sup>2+</sup> alginate (3%) beads. The optimum pH levels of the free and immobilized recombinant rhamnosidase were found to be 6.0 and 7.5, and the optimum temperature 55 and 60 °C respectively. At 50 °C, the free enzyme was relatively stable and exhibited a less than 50% reduction in residual activity after 180 min of incubation. The free and immobilized enzymes achieved 76% and 67% hydrolysis of the naringin in <i>Kinnow juice </i>respectively. Immobilization of recombinant rhamnosidase enabled its reutilization up to 9 hydrolysis batches without an appreciable loss in activity. This result indicated that the His-tagged thermostable rhamnosidase could be prepared as described and may serve to illustrate an economical and commercially viable process for industrial application.

History

Related Materials

Location

Oxford, England

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Elsevier Ltd.

Journal

Process biochemistry

Volume

45

Pagination

1 - 6

ISSN

1359-5113

eISSN

1873-3298