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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Production of pectic enzymes in yeasts

TLDR
The idea is now emerging that this type of yeast enzyme could offer an alternative to fungal enzymes for industrial applications.
Abstract
When grown in the appropriate medium, several yeast species produce pectinases able to degrade pectic substances. It is mainly exocellular endopolygalacturonases that break pectins or pectate down by hydrolysis of α-1,4-glycosidic linkages in a random way. Biochemical characterisation of these enzymes has shown that they have an optimal pH in the acidic region and an optimal temperature between 40 and 55°C. Their production by yeasts is a constitutive feature and is repressed by the glucose concentration and aeration. Pectic substances and their hydrolysis products are used as carbon sources by a limited number of yeasts and hence these enzymes must be involved in the colonisation of different parts of plants, including fruits. The first yeast pectic enzyme (encoded by the PSE3 gene) was cloned from Tichosporon penicillatum. Recently, a polygalacturonase-encoding gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been cloned and overexpressed in several strains and the gene for an extracellualar endopolygalacturonase from Kluyveromyces marxianus has also been described. Taking all the results together, the idea is now emerging that this type of yeast enzyme could offer an alternative to fungal enzymes for industrial applications.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial pectinolytic enzymes: A review

TL;DR: Pectinases are one of the most widely distributed enzymes in bacteria, fungi and plants as discussed by the authors, and they have a share of 25% in the global sales of food enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Microbiology of Cocoa Fermentation and its Role in Chocolate Quality

TL;DR: To improve the quality of the processed beans, more research is needed on pectinase production by yeasts, better depulping, fermenter design, and the use of starter cultures.

FEMS microbiology letters

ScienceDirect
TL;DR: All aspects of microbiology, including virology, are covered.
Journal ArticleDOI

The yeast Kluyveromyces marxianus and its biotechnological potential.

TL;DR: To increase knowledge on the biology of this species and to enable the potential applications to be converted into industrial practice, a more systematic approach, including the careful choice of (a) reference strain(s) by the scientific community, would certainly be of great value.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial alkaline pectinases and their industrial applications: a review.

TL;DR: The present review features the potential applications and uses of microbial alkaline pectinases, the nature of pECTin, and the vast range of pectinolytic enzymes that function to mineralize pectic substances present in the environment to explore the potential of these enzymes and to encourage new alkalinepectinase-based industrial technology.
References
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FEMS microbiology letters

ScienceDirect
TL;DR: All aspects of microbiology, including virology, are covered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detection of polygalacturonase, pectin-lyase and pectin-esterase activities in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain

TL;DR: The catalytic capacity of several excreted pectinolytic enzymes obtained from various yeast strains was examined using in vivo and biochemical techniques and Saccharomyces cerevisiae was identified as SCPP, which allows pectin hydrolysis during cell growth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies on polygalacturonase of certain yeasts.

TL;DR: Among a considerable number of yeast species, representing nearly all yeast genera, only six were found which were capable of causing certain changes in pectin, when grown in its presence, the action was found to be due to an exocellular, nonadaptive, polygalacturonase-like enzyme, free of pectinesterase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Endopolygalacturonase secretion by Kluyveromyces marxianus and other cocoa pulp degrading yeasts

TL;DR: Among 12 yeast strains isolated from cocoa fermentations, only four showed extracellular pectinase activity, and in most mutants, there was a clear correlation between PG and inulinase activity secreted from cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Production and partial characterization of an endopolygalacturonase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

TL;DR: The enzyme exhibited an endo-splitting mechanism as deduced from viscosimetry experiments as well as from an HPLC study of the end products.
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