Aims: Purification and characterization of a new bacteriocin, Bacthuricin F4 of Bacillus thuringiensis. Methods and Results: A newly isolated B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki strain BUPM4, was shown to produce a novel bacteriocin named Bacthuricin F4. The highest bacteriocin activity was found in the growth medium and evidenced in the late exponential growth phase. Bacthuricin F4 could be purified by a two-step procedure: ammonium sulphate precipitation of protein from culture supernatant followed by a reverse phase chromatography. Upon purification, the specific activity was increased 100-fold. This bacteriocin was heat-stable up to 70°C and resisted up to pH 3AE0. Bacthuricin F4 was sensitive to proteases demonstrating its proteinaceous nature. Its molecular mass, determined by mass spectrometry was 3160AE05 Da. Direct N-terminal sequencing of Bacthuricin F4 revealed the following sequence: DWTXWSXL. The latter was unique in the databases. Bacthuricin F4 was active against Bacillus species while it had little or no effect on Gram-negative bacteria. Conclusions: A strain BUPM4 of B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki, was shown to produce a new bacteriocin named Bacthuricin F4 of both new molecular mass (3160AE05 Da) and new amino acid terminal sequence. This is, to our knowledge, the first bacteriocin exhibiting such characteristics reported to be produced by B. thuringiensis. Significance and Impact of the Study: The bacteriocin produced by the B. thuringiensis strain BUPM4 respond to both criteria of thermostability and stability to low pHs. Thus, it could be used for the control of the related species of Bacillus harmful for agricultural products.
Olive mill wastewaters are powerful pollutants that are difficult to treat as they contain high concentrations of recalcitrant and toxic polyphenolics of different molecular masses. We report in this paper that pre-treatment of phenolic fractions extracted from olive mill wastewaters as well as a synthetic phenolic mixture by the electro-Fenton method is a highly efficient procedure in which low mass phenolics are polymerised to polyphenolics and removed by precipitation. This decreases the toxicity load by 78% and makes the waste amenable to further anaerobic post-treatment.
We have previously isolated a new actinomycete strain from Tunisian soil called Streptomyces sp. US24, and have shown that it produces two bioactive molecules including a Cyclo (L-Phe, L-Pro) diketopiperazine (DKP). To identify the structural genes responsible for the synthesis of this DKP derivative, a PCR amplification (696 bp) was carried out using the Streptomyces sp. US24 genomic DNA as template and two degenerate oligonucleotides designed by analogy with genes encoding peptide synthetases (NRPS). The detection of DKP derivative biosynthetic pathway of the Streptomyces sp. US24 strain was then achieved by gene disruption via homologous recombination using a suicide vector derived from the conjugative plasmid pSET152 and containing the PCR product. Chromatography analysis, biological tests and spectroscopic studies of supernatant cultures of the wild-type Streptomyces sp. US24 strain and three mutants obtained by this gene targeting disruption approach showed that the amplified DNA fragment is required for Cyclo (L-Phe, L-Pro) biosynthesis in Streptomyces sp. US24 strain. This DKP derivative seems to be produced either directly via a nonribosomal pathway or as a side product in the course of nonribosomal synthesis of a longer peptide.
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