Saravanan Prakash, Chatterjee Antara, Kiran K J, Bhowmick Gourav Dhar, Sappati Praveen Kumar, Nagarajan Vishwanath
Agricultural and Food Engineering Department, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur, West Bengal 721302 India.
Indian J Microbiol. 2024 Jun;64(2):593-602. doi: 10.1007/s12088-024-01205-w. Epub 2024 Mar 3.
Seaweed, a valuable marine resource widely cultivated worldwide, can be vulnerable to stress and microbiome alterations, resulting in the decay of seaweeds and substantial economic losses. To investigate the seaweed-microbiome interaction, our study aimed to isolate marine bacteria and fungi that can cause Ice-Ice disease and evaluate their enzymatic characteristics for potential application in bioethanol production from seaweed biomass. Three red seaweed species (, , and ) were obtained for our study and placed in separate culture tanks. Among the 18 isolated marine microbial species, 12 tested positive for agar and carrageenan activity: six exhibited both activities, three displayed only agar activity, and three only carrageenan activity. DNA sequencing of the positive microbes identified ten bacteria and two yeast species. The 3,5-Dinitrosalicylic acid (DNSA) assay results revealed that the identified bacterial strain FJAT-47861 exhibited the highest carrageenase activity (0.76 units/ml), while the yeast strain PM79 demonstrated the highest agarase activity (0.52 units/ml). Notably, strain PM79 exhibited the highest overall agarase and carrageenase activity, averaging 0.63 units/ml. The average carrageenase activity of all six positive microbes was 1.5 times higher than their agarase activity. These findings suggest that the 12 isolated microbes hold potential for bioethanol production from macroalgae, as their agarase and carrageenase activity indicates their ability to break down seaweed cell wall carbohydrates, causing ice-ice disease. Moreover, these results provide exciting prospects for harnessing the bioconversion capabilities of these microbes, paving the way for sustainable and efficient bioethanol production from seaweed resources.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12088-024-01205-w.
海藻是一种在全球广泛种植的宝贵海洋资源,容易受到压力和微生物群落变化的影响,导致海藻腐烂并造成重大经济损失。为了研究海藻与微生物群落的相互作用,我们的研究旨在分离可导致冰-冰病的海洋细菌和真菌,并评估它们的酶特性,以探讨其在利用海藻生物质生产生物乙醇方面的潜在应用。我们的研究获取了三种红藻物种( 、 和 ),并将它们放置在单独的培养槽中。在分离出的18种海洋微生物物种中,有12种对琼脂和卡拉胶活性检测呈阳性:6种同时表现出两种活性,3种仅表现出琼脂活性,3种仅表现出卡拉胶活性。对阳性微生物的DNA测序鉴定出10种细菌和2种酵母物种。3,5-二硝基水杨酸(DNSA)测定结果显示,鉴定出的细菌菌株FJAT-47861表现出最高的卡拉胶酶活性(0.76单位/毫升),而酵母菌株PM79表现出最高的琼脂酶活性(0.52单位/毫升)。值得注意的是,菌株PM79表现出最高的总体琼脂酶和卡拉胶酶活性,平均为0.63单位/毫升。所有6种阳性微生物的平均卡拉胶酶活性比其琼脂酶活性高1.5倍。这些发现表明,分离出的这12种微生物具有利用大型海藻生产生物乙醇的潜力,因为它们的琼脂酶和卡拉胶酶活性表明它们有能力分解海藻细胞壁碳水化合物,从而引发冰-冰病。此外,这些结果为利用这些微生物的生物转化能力提供了令人兴奋的前景,为从海藻资源中可持续、高效地生产生物乙醇铺平了道路。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s12088-024-01205-w获取的补充材料。