2002
DOI: 10.1002/1521-4028(200212)42:6<388::aid-jobm388>3.0.co;2-h
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Temperature effect in the production of multiple xylanases by Aspergillus fumigatus

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Cited by 21 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The optimized xylanase activity was higher than that reported for A. nidulans KK-99 (40 IU/mL), 28) Penicillium oxalicum (14.5 IU/mL), 29) and Chaetomium thermophilum (61 IU/mL), 30) and comparable to that from A. fumigatus (125.1 IU/mL). 31) The optimized operational parameters by CCD were then applied in a laboratory scale-up in 8-liter batch fermentation. A significant increase in xylanase activity was observed for the bioreactor which resulted in 106.2 IU/mL of xylanase after fermentation for 5 d. This might have been due to improved correlate morphology and engineering parameters such as quality of mixing, oxygen transfer rate, volumetric oxygen, and heat transfer coefficients during filamentous fermentation in the large-scale bioreactor system.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The optimized xylanase activity was higher than that reported for A. nidulans KK-99 (40 IU/mL), 28) Penicillium oxalicum (14.5 IU/mL), 29) and Chaetomium thermophilum (61 IU/mL), 30) and comparable to that from A. fumigatus (125.1 IU/mL). 31) The optimized operational parameters by CCD were then applied in a laboratory scale-up in 8-liter batch fermentation. A significant increase in xylanase activity was observed for the bioreactor which resulted in 106.2 IU/mL of xylanase after fermentation for 5 d. This might have been due to improved correlate morphology and engineering parameters such as quality of mixing, oxygen transfer rate, volumetric oxygen, and heat transfer coefficients during filamentous fermentation in the large-scale bioreactor system.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The highest xylanase production with wheat bran was possible because this substrate is rich in proteins and hemicelluloses, which are used by microorganisms as sources of energy and carbon, through specific enzymes such as xylanase. Wheat bran, among other substrates used in solid systems, is the most efficient, because it does not perform catabolic repression on the enzymatic activity (LENARTOVICZ et al, 2002).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Xylanase is one of the microbial extracellular enzymes that has attracted great interest due to its biotechnological potential in many industrial processes, e.g., in the production of oligosaccharides (PELLERIN et al, 1991); in the food industry (HALTRICH et al, 1996); cellulose and paper industry (YAUN; RUGYU, 1999); xylitol and ethanol production (BEG et al, 2001); cellular proteins, liquid fuels, and other chemical substances (CHAN et al, 2002). Xylanases catalyze xylan hydrolysis, and many environmental factors affect production of these enzymes, but carbon source can induce or repress the catabolic activity of them, which can this enzyme biosynthesis, such as: temperature and cultivation time (HALTRICH et al, 1996); and substrate used (LENARTOVICZ et al, 2002;.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High molecular weight xylanases of above 200 kDa were reported from Aspergillus fumigatus AR1 (Anthony et al 2003). Lenartovicz et al (2002) reported presence of both high molecular (45.7 & 39.8 kDa) and low molecular weight (18.2 kDa) xylanases from Aspergillus fumigatus.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%