97 research outputs found
Les lipases sont des hydrolases atypiques : principales caractéristiques et applications
ipases are atypical hydrolases: principal characteristics and applications. Due to their kinetic and substrate specificities, triacylglycerol acyl-hydrolases or lipases are atypical enzymes. In function of their microenvironment, lipases are able to act as hydrolases in aqueous solution or as biocatalysts in organic synthesis. As hydrolases, they are responsible of the triglycerids catabolism into fatty acids and glycerol. In many organisms, this reaction plays a major role in the fat and lipid metabolism. In addition, lipases are also able to hydrolyse phospholipids and cholesterol esters. In organic solvent, lipases could catalyse reactions such as esterifications, acidolysis or alcoolysis with enantio-, regio- and chimioselectivity. Lipases form a mixed class of enzyme due to their animal, vegetal or microbial origins. All those properties led to the development of many applications in the food and chemical industries but also in the medical and therapeutic field
Les produits de la mer au Sénégal et le potentiel des bactéries lactiques et des bactériocines pour la conservation
Fish preservation in Senegal: potential use of lactic acid bacteria and their antibacterial metabolites. In Senegal, fish are first as staple animal protein foods for populations. Socioeconomic constraints hamper the development of industrial preservations. Traditional fish production has some inherent food safety concerns considering the high susceptibility of seafood to bacterial spoilage. Some strategies of seafood products preservation using lactic acid bacteria producing bacteriocin are not very expensive and do not consume energy very much. They can be adapted in the preservation of fish in Senegal particularly in the fermentation in which the catches, generally handled for many hours at ambient temperature, are only added salt (NaCl) and sun dried. Lactic acid bacteria producing bacteriocins could be used as starters (with addition of carbohydrates) during the preparation of fish for rendering them more resistant to the growth of spoilage and pathogenic bacteria by in situ production of organic acids and bacteriocins. A second alternative of application of these bacteria is to use bactericidal solutions obtained from their cultures as additional barrier to sodium chloride to prevent growth of the flora during fish storage for maturation. These new strategies of preparation combined with drying can be used to enhance microbiological and dietetic qualities of local seafood commodities
Munkoyo : des racines comme sources potentielles en enzymes amylolytiques et une boisson fermentée traditionnelle (synthèse bibliographique)
Munkoyo: roots as potential sources of amylolytic enzymes and a traditional fermented beverage. A review. Munkoyo is a fermented cereal-based beverage. The special feature of this beverage is the use of munkoyo roots as the source of amylolytic enzymes for manufacturing the beverage. This review summarizes the scientific knowledge on munkoyo. The following points are discussed: botanical description; distribution areas; propagation; chemical composition of roots; amylolytic enzymes in the roots and their properties; production process of the beverage; biochemical processes involved in the production of the beverage; and nutritional values and toxicity of the beverage. In order to highlight the value of munkoyo roots and to orientate research towards the optimization and/or industrialization of the production process, discussions are focused on a comparison of munkoyo with other fermented beverages and sources of amylolytic enzymes
Does fertilization practices increase residual nitrate nitrogen in soil irrigated with treated wastewater? An experimental trial on maize
Treated wastewater has significantly improved DM yield compared to ground water. The form of nitrogen provided by the water was determinant in drawing yields. Irrigation with ground water (where nitrogen is as nitrate) induces a faster migration of nitrogen at depth. In contrast, using treated wastewater (where nitrogen is as ammonium), resulting in a relative distribution of the remaining nitric smaller in the lower profile and therefore higher in the surface, especially after the second year (2010). In addition, the relative distribution of nitrates in the soil surface is even more important in the presence of organic manure. All happens as if a certain amount of ammonium provided by treated wastewater is retained in the organic compounds of manure. Yields were significantly lower in irrigation with treated wastewater in the second year and especially when fertilization was given in additional. If the soil can be used for storage of the nitrogen supplied by the treated wastewater during the first year of irrigation (24 kg N-NO3/ha before irrigation to 115 kg N-NO3/ha after irrigation), to the second year the capacity drops (to 64 N-NO3/ha) and a significant increase in nitrate leaching occurs. Therefore, unlike the contribution of manure that seems enrich the topsoil nitrate nitrogen, at least during the first campaign, mineral fertilization unreasoning causes faster migration of nitrogen at depth
Optimization of extracellular catalase production from Aspergillus phoenicis K30 by a linear regression method using date flour as single carbon source and purification of the enzyme
Aspergillus phoenicis K30 is the selected mutant which produces an amount of extracellular catalase. To amplify the extracellular catalase production by the strain, a fermentation optimization was performed. To select the factors affecting the production, nine active variables (factors) consisting of 12 experiments were analyzed by Plackett-Burman design. Each variable was tested at two levels, a higher and a lower level. The studies of the effect of each variable and the establishment of a correlation between the response of enzyme activity and variables revealed that the link is a multiple linear regression form. The optimization was carried out through a simplex algorithm. The amount of extracellular catalase produced by the strain in the optimized medium was about four times higher than that obtained in non optimized medium corresponding to 3820 mg/L of extracellular proteins including 59500 U/L of extracellular catalase activity after 96 h of fermentation. The steps of purification were allowed to improve enzyme activity by 305-fold. From an analytical gel electrophoresis under native conditions, an apparent molecular mass of 158 kDa was determined suggesting that the enzyme is a homodimer. The isoelectric point of the protein was found to be 5 ± 0.1 as determined by a Pharmacia Phast-system.Keywords: Aspergillus phoenicis, extracellular catalase purification, dates flour, optimization, multiple linear regression.African Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 12(19), pp. 2646-265
Parameter identification of the STICS crop model, using an accelerated formal MCMC approach
This study presents a Bayesian approach for the parameters’ identification of the STICS crop model based on the recently developed Differential Evolution Adaptive Metropolis (DREAM) algorithm. The posterior distributions of nine specific crop parameters of the STICS model were sampled with the aim to improve the growth simulations of a winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) culture. The results obtained with the DREAM algorithm were initially compared to those obtained with a Nelder-Mead Simplex algorithm embedded within the OptimiSTICS package. Then, three types of likelihood functions implemented within the DREAM algorithm were compared, namely the standard least square, the weighted least square, and a transformed likelihood function that makes explicit use of the coefficient of variation (CV). The results showed that the proposed CV likelihood function allowed taking into account both noise on measurements and heteroscedasticity which are regularly encountered in crop modellingPeer reviewe
Yarrowia lipolytica growth under increased air pressure: influence on enzymes production
Improvement of microbial cell cultures oxygenation can be achieved by the
increase of total air pressure, which increases oxygen solubility in the medium. In this
work, a pressurized bioreactor was used for Yarrowia lipolytica batch cultivation under
increased air pressure from 1 to 6 bar. Cell growth was strongly enhanced by the pressure
rise. Fivefold and 3.4-fold increases in the biomass production and in specific growth rate,
respectively, were observed under 6 bar. The increase of oxygen availability caused the
induction of the antioxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase, which indicates that the
defensive mechanisms of the cells against oxidative stress were effective and cells could
cope with increased pressure. The pregrowth of Y. lipolytica under increased pressure
conditions did not affect the lipase production ability of the cells. Moreover, the
extracellular lipase activity increased 96% using a 5-bar air pressure instead of air at 1-
bar pressure during the enzyme production phase. Thus, air pressure increase in bioreactors
is an effective mean of cell mass and enzyme productivity enhancement in bioprocess based
in Y. lipolytica cultures
Examining wheat yield sensitivity to temperature and precipitation changes for a large ensemble of crop models using impact response surfaces
Impact response surfaces (IRSs) depict the response of an impact variable to changes in two explanatory variables as a plotted surface. Here, IRSs of spring and winter wheat yields were constructed from a 25-member ensemble of process-based crop simulation models.
Twenty-one models were calibrated by different groups using a common set of calibration data, with calibrations applied independently to the same models in three cases. The sensitivity of modelled yield to changes in temperature and precipitation was tested by
systematically modifying values of 1981-2010 baseline weather data to span the range of 19 changes projected for the late 21st century at three locations in Europe
Placenta-Like Structure of the Aphid Endoparasitic Wasp Aphidius ervi: A Strategy of Optimal Resources Acquisition
Aphidius ervi (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) is an entomophagous parasitoid known to be an effective parasitoid of several aphid species of economic importance. A reduction of its production cost during mass rearing for inundative release is needed to improve its use in biological control of pests. In these contexts, a careful analysis of its entire development phases within its host is needed. This paper shows that this parasitoid has some characteristics in its embryological development rather complex and different from most other reported insects, which can be phylogenetically very close. First, its yolkless egg allows a high fecundity of the female but force them to hatch from the egg shell rapidly to the host hemocoel. An early cellularisation allowing a rapid differentiation of a serosa membrane seems to confirm this hypothesis. The serosa wraps the developing embryo until the first instar larva stage and invades the host tissues by microvilli projections and form a placenta like structure able to divert host resources and allowing nutrition and respiration of embryo. Such interspecific invasion, at the cellular level, recalls mammal's trophoblasts that anchors maternal uterine wall and underlines the high adaptation of A. ervi to develop in the host body
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