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Comparison of Two Feather-Degrading Bacillus Licheniformis Strains

  • Lin, Xiang (Microbial and Feed Biotechnology Laboratory, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, The University of British Columbia) ;
  • Lee, Soo-Won (Dept. of Food and Life Science, Sungkyunkwan University) ;
  • Bae, Hee Dong (Dept. of Food and Life Science, Sungkyunkwan University) ;
  • Shelford, Jim A. (Microbial and Feed Biotechnology Laboratory, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, The University of British Columbia) ;
  • Cheng, Kuo-Joan (Microbial and Feed Biotechnology Laboratory, Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, The University of British Columbia)
  • Received : 2001.04.27
  • Accepted : 2001.07.21
  • Published : 2001.12.01

Abstract

Bacillus licheniformis strains L-25 and PWD-1 are two thermophilic feather-degrading bacteria. Despite isolated from different environmental conditions, they were both capable of breaking down chicken feathers and growing in a medium in which feather was the only source of carbon and nitrogen. A 1.46-kb keratinase gene (ker B) was isolated from strain L-25 by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using L-25 genomic DNA as templates. Sequencing results reveal that ker B shares great sequence identity with a previously published keratinase gene of B. licheniformis PWD-1 (ker A). Only two amino acids differences were found in the deduced amino acid sequence between the keratinases from L-25 and PWD-1. However several nucleotide changes were found upstream of the putative promoter region. Protease inhibition studies indicated that neutral protease activity accounted for approximate 25 to 30% of total extracellular proteolytic activity produced by strain L-25 in the feather medium. In contrast, no measurable neutral protease activity was produced by strain PWD-1 in the feather medium. When glucose (1%), a common catabolic repressor, was added into the feather medium, L-25 was still able to grow and produce keratinase. Strain PWD-1 produced no neutral protease activity and its growth was severely inhibited in the feather medium containing glucose. L-25 produced an enhanced level of keratinase in the feather medium in comparison with PWD-1.

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Cited by

  1. Characterization of a protease of a feather-degrading Microbacterium species vol.39, pp.2, 2004, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1472-765X.2004.01558.x
  2. Keratinolytic Enzymes for Cleaning Edible Bird’s Nest vol.14, pp.3, 2001, https://doi.org/10.13005/bbra/2533
  3. Bacillus sp. FPF-1 Produced Keratinase with High Potential for Chicken Feather Degradation vol.25, pp.7, 2001, https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25071505