Partial purification of tannase enzyme produced by Bacillus licheniformis isolated from local soils

  • RASHA AL HADDAD National Commission for Biotechnology, Damascus, Syria
  • MOHAMADKHAIR TAHLA Food Science Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Damascus University, Syria
  • LINA AL AMIR National Commission for Biotechnology, Damascus, Syria.
Keywords: Tannase; Bacillus licheniformis; partial purification; ammonium sulphate; gel filtration

Abstract

Tannase is an enzyme that causes hydrolysis of a group of tannins (gallo-tannins) to gallic acid and glucose. This enzyme is of importance due to its numerous applications in many fields, such as in the food industry by enhancing tea and coffee flavour and improving the quality of fruit juices rich in tannins. Gallic acid is applied in the drug industry, and pro- duction of antioxidants is used in the oil industry. In this study, Tannase was produced by locally isolated Bacillus licheniformis using spent tea as substrate using submerged fermen- tation. The crude enzyme was extracted and centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 10 minutes at 15˚C, and a partial purification was carried out using precipitation by ammonium sulphate 80%, then Sephadex G-75 gel filtration column (2.2×1.8 cm) with acetate buffered solution (0.2 M, pH 5.0) at a flow rate of 60 ml/h up to 3.16 fold with a specific activity reaching 0.931 IU/mg(unit of enzyme per mg). The molecular weight of the purified enzyme was determined to be 48 kDa using SDS-PAGE. Thus, the purification step is a step before ap- plying the pure enzyme in the food industry

Published
2023-12-02
How to Cite
RASHA AL HADDAD, MOHAMADKHAIR TAHLA, & LINA AL AMIR. (2023). Partial purification of tannase enzyme produced by Bacillus licheniformis isolated from local soils. Future of Food: Journal on Food, Agriculture and Society, 11(5). Retrieved from https://thefutureoffoodjournal.com/manuscript/index.php/FOFJ/article/view/707
Section
Research Articles