Sajish Sagia, Tomar Govind Singh, Singh Surender, Kaushik Rajeev
Division of Microbiology, ICAR-Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), New Delhi, India.
Department of Microbiology, Central University of Haryana, Mahendergarh, India.
Environ Technol. 2025 Sep 15:1-18. doi: 10.1080/09593330.2025.2555498.
Microbial pectinases are one among the crucial industrial enzymes widely used in fruit juice clarification, textile processing, dietary fibre extraction and waste management. However, high cost of commercial raw materials poses a significant challenge in the microbial production of pectinases. The utilization of agro-food residues as low-cost substrates offers a cost-effective and greener approach to enzyme production. In this study, pectinolytic bacterial and fungal isolates were obtained from rotten fruits and vegetables; and screened for polygalacturonase and pectin lyase production. After characterizing the isolates for their ability to utilize various sugars, several agro-residues were evaluated as carbon and nitrogen substrates for pectinase production. MIB02 exhibited significant polygalacturonase (155.23 IU mL) with sweet lime peel powder and corn steep liquor as carbon and nitrogen substrates. Similarly, MIPe01 demonstrated pectin lyase activity of 9.12 IU mL with orange peel powder and soybean meal. Although enzyme yield was lower from agro-residues compared to commercial pectin, potential trade-off between reduced production costs and production efficiency enhances the economic feasibility of pectinase production. The findings from our study support the valorization of agro-food residues as a greener and cheaper approach for pectinase production contributing towards a circular bio-economy.