Efficient production of a novel alkaline cold-active phospholipase C from Aspergillus oryzae by molecular chaperon co-expression for crude oil degumming.
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Efficient production of a novel alkaline cold-active phospholipase C from Aspergillus oryzae by molecular chaperon co-expression for crude oil degumming.
Food Chem. 2021 Feb 02;350:129212
Authors: Wang L, Hu T, Jiang Z, Yan Q, Yang S
Abstract
A novel alkaline cold-active phospholipase C (PLC) gene (AoPC) from Aspergillus oryzae was cloned. AoPC exhibited the highest sequence similarity of 32.5% with that of a PLC from Arabidopsis thaliana. The gene was co-expressed in Pichia pastoris with molecular chaperone PDI (protein disulfide isomerases), and the highest PLC activity of 82, 782 U mL-1 was achieved in a 5-L fermentor. The recombinant enzyme (AoPC) was most active at pH 8.0 and 25 °C, respectively, and it was stable over a broad pH range of 4.5-9.0 and up to 40 °C. It is the first fungal alkaline PLC. The application of AoPC (with 25% citric acid, w/w) in oil degumming process significantly reduced the phosphorus of crude soybean oil by 93.3% to a commercially acceptable level (<10 mg kg-1). Therefore, the relatively high yield and excellent properties of AoPC may possess it great potential in crude oil refining industry.
PMID: 33609939 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]
Source: Industry