Production of fibrinolytic enzyme by the marine isolate serratia marcescens subsp. sakuensis and its in-vitro anticoagulant and thrombolytic potential

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2017

Authors

Krishnamurthy, A.
Belur, P.D.
Rai, P.
Rekha, P.D.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Marine ecosystems house a plethora of microorganisms capable of producing therapeutically important metabolites, but remains largely unexplored. The aim of this work was to find a new marine bacterium capable of producing a fibrinolytic enzyme, which is fibrin specific, stable at the physiological pH, exhibiting both anticoagulant and thrombolytic effect in vitro. Once a potential bacterium was found, an effort was made to optimize medium. Based on the screening studies, the isolate C7 was chosen for further studies and was identified as Serratia marcescens subsp. sakuensis. Medium optimisation using Plackett-Burman design and one-factor experiments suggested that nitrogen sources have a profound effect on enzyme production. Fibrinolytic enzyme activity increased to 2.5 fold (487.29 U/mL) in the optimised medium as compared to unoptimised medium (191.65 U/mL). Current study demonstrates that seawater could be an excellent source for novel marine organisms capable of producing fibrinolytic enzymes. Fibrinolytic enzyme produced by Serratia marcescens subsp. sakuensis appears to be a potential candidate for thrombolytic therapy due to its high specific fibrinolytic activity, high ratio of fibrinolytic to fibrinogenolytic activity, activity at the physiological pH, anticoagulant and thrombolytic effects.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology, 2017, Vol.11, 4, pp.1987-1998

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By