Studies on novel Oxalate Oxidase produced by an endophytic bacterium Ochrobactrum intermedium CL6
Date
2017
Authors
Kumar, Kunal
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Oxalate Oxidase (EC 1.2.3.4) catalyzes the oxidative cleavage of oxalate to carbon
dioxide with the reduction of molecular oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. Oxalate Oxidase
(OxO) finds application in clinical assay for oxalate in blood and urine, apart from
several potential industrial applications. This research work is about isolation of
endophytic bacteria from the tubers of the plants Colocasia esculenta, Beta vulgaris,
Ipomoea batatas and peel of Musa paradisiaca fruit for screening of OxO producing
strain. A total of 49 endophytes were isolated and out of which, 4 were OxO producing
strains. Based upon the OxO activity produced in nutrient medium, one strain CL6
isolated from tubers of C. esculenta was selected and identified as Ochrobactrum
intermedium by 16 S rDNA sequencing. The effect of media components and process
variables on the growth kinetics of the O. intermedium CL6 and on the production of
the enzyme OxO showed that production is inducible and requires manganese ions in
the medium, and very low fill-up volume is beneficial. Characterization of the partially
purified OxO revealed many intriguing characteristics. The enzyme is thermostable and
remains active for 6 h in the temperature range of 4-80°C. This enzyme is the only
known OxO which did not show substrate inhibition up to a substrate concentration of
50 mM. The enzymatic activity was not adversely affected by most of the metal ions
and biochemical agents (K+, Na+, Zn2+, Fe3+, Mn2+, Mg2+, Glucose, Urea, and Lactate).
The enzyme appears to be a metalloprotein stimulated by Ca2+ and Fe2+. It’s Km and
kcat for oxalate was found to be 0.45mM and 85 s-1 respectively. Chemical modification
of OxO revealed that cysteine, carboxylates, histidine and tryptophan residues are part
of the active site. A two-fold increase in Oxalate Oxidase activity was observed when
histidine residues were modified with 15mM diethylpyrocarbonate. Application studies
on the development of a novel enzymatic treatment method to reduce total oxalate
content of the extracted starch from Taro flour resulted in 97% reduction and this
treatment did not alter any of the desirable physico-chemical properties of the starch.
Description
Keywords
Department of Chemical Engineering, Oxalate Oxidase, Endophytes, Ochrobactrum intermedium, Thermostable, Taro, Starch