48 research outputs found

    ASSAY OF SERUM GLUTAMIC-OXALOACETIC TRANSAMINASE USING MALATE-DEHYDROGENASE PREPARATION OBTAINED FROM STREPTOMYCES-AUREOFACIENS

    No full text
    A modified spectrophotometric method for serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) assay was developed. A crude cell-free extract from Streptomyces aureofaciens which showed a high level of malate dehydrogenase (MDH) activity (E.C. 1.1.1.37) was used as the enzymatic indicator. The lyophilized microbial preparation was used without previous purification and was quite stable under refrigeration for one year. Serum sample assays using both the method utilizing the crude cell extract and an enzymatic commercial kit showed good correlation.28132305231

    Assay of Serum Glutamic-Oxaloacetic Transaminase Using Malate Dehydrogenase Preparation Obtained from Streptomyces aureofaciens

    No full text
    A modified spectrophotometric method for serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) assay was developed. A crude cell-free extract from Streptomyces aureofaciens which showed a high level of malate dehydrogenase (MDH) activity (E.C. 1.1.1.37) was used as the enzymatic indicator. The lyophilized microbial preparation was used without previous purification and was quite stable under refrigeration for one year. Serum sample assays using both the method utilizing the crude cell extract and an enzymatic commercial kit showed good correlation

    GROWTH AND FERMENTATION CHARACTERISTICS OF NEW SELECTED STRAINS OF SACCHAROMYCES AT HIGH-TEMPERATURES AND HIGH CELL DENSITIES

    No full text
    Maintenance of high cell viability was the main characteristic of our new strains of thermotolerant Saccharomyces. Total sugar conversion to ethanol was observed for sugarcane juice fermentation at 38-40-degrees-C in less than 10 h and without continuous aeration of the culture. Invertase activity differed among the selected strains and increased during fermentation but was not dependent on cell viability. Invertase activity of the cells and optimum temperature for growth, as well as velocity of ethanol formation, were dependent on medium composition and the type of strain used. At high sugarcane syrup concentrations, the best temperature for ethanol formation by strain 781 was 35-degrees-C. Distinct differences among the velocities of ethanol production using selected strains were also observed in sugarcane syrup at 35-38-degrees-C

    Efficient flotation of yeast cells grown in batch culture

    No full text
    A fast flotation assay was used to select new floating yeast strains. The flotation ability did not seem to be directly correlated to total extracellular protein concentration of the culture. However, the hydrophobicity of the cell was definitely correlated to the flotation capacity. The Saccharomyces strains (FLT strains) were highly hydrophobic and showed an excellent flotation performance in batch cultures without additives (flotation agents) and with no need for a special flotation chamber or flotation column. A stable and well-organized structure was evident in the dried foam as shown by scanning electron microscopy which revealed its unique structure showing mummified cells (dehydrated) attached to each other. The attachment among the cells and the high protein concentration of the foams indicated that proteins might be involved in the foam formation. The floating strains (strains FLT) which were not flocculent and showed no tendency to aggregate, were capable of growing and producing ethanol in a synthetic medium containing high glucose concentration as a carbon source. The phenomenon responsible for flotation seems to be quite different from the flocculation phenomenon. (C) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc

    ORIGINAL ARTICLE Pectinolytic activity secreted by yeasts isolated from fermented citrus molasses

    No full text
    Pectin, the major constituent of plant cell walls, is a com-plex heteropolysaccharide mainly composed of d-polygal-acturonic acid residues. Pectinolytic complexes have been isolated from plants, filamentous fungi and bacteria (Fog
    corecore