Team:Tec-Monterrey/projectoverview
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- | Inverted sugar contains fructose and glucose in equal proportions. This product has a greater demand than pure glucose as a food and drink sweetener due to many useful physical and functional attributes of fructose including sweetness, flavor enhancement, humectancy, color and flavor development, freezing-point depression, and osmotic stability. (Hanover | + | Inverted sugar contains fructose and glucose in equal proportions. This product has a greater demand than pure glucose as a food and drink sweetener due to many useful physical and functional attributes of fructose including sweetness, flavor enhancement, humectancy, color and flavor development, freezing-point depression, and osmotic stability. (Hanover & White, 1993). Sugarcane bagasse constitutes the fibrous residue of sugar cane after undergoing conventional milling, which contains about 50% cellulose, 25% hemicellulose and 25% lignin (Pandey <i>et al</i>., 2000). Bagasse is of low economic value and constitutes an environmental problem to sugar mills and surrounding districts because many mills burn large portions of the bagasse. (Lavarack <i>et al</i>., 2002) However, it can serve as an ideal substrate for microbial processes for the production of value-added products (Pandey <i>et al</i>., 2000), specifically as an ideally inexpensive and abundantly available source of sugar for fermentation into fuel ethanol (Yanase <i>et al</i>., 2005). The implementation of new technologies that enable the production of inverted sugar from sucrose, and the use of sugarcane bagasse as bio-fuel source could benefit 3 principal areas: food industry, green energy and environment. Introduction of enzymatically-inverted sugar could profit sugar mills generating diversification of sugarcane products, and enzymatic hydrolysis of cellulosic components of sugarcane bagasse could contribute to the production of bio-ethanol, in this way, reducing CO<sub>2</sub> emission during the burning process of the excess bagasse after milling. |
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<p class="textojustif"> A cellulase was considered for the new application of sugarcane bagasse. <i>Clostridium thermocellum</i> endoglucanase CelD is an enzyme that belongs to family E cellulases. Family E includes, beside <i>C.thermocellum</i> CelD, a number of cellulases such as <i>Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens</i> cellodextrinase Cedl, <i>C. thermocellum</i> endoglucanase CelF, <i>Cellulomonas fimi</i> endoglucanase CenB, <i>Clostridium stercorarium</i> Avicelase I, <i>Persea americana</i> endoglucanase, <i>Dictyostelium discoideum</i> endoglucanase, <i>Cellulomonas fimi</i> endoglucanase CenC, and <i>Pseudomonas fluorescens</i> var. cellulosa endoglucanase A. (Chauvaux, Beguin & Aubert, 1992). | <p class="textojustif"> A cellulase was considered for the new application of sugarcane bagasse. <i>Clostridium thermocellum</i> endoglucanase CelD is an enzyme that belongs to family E cellulases. Family E includes, beside <i>C.thermocellum</i> CelD, a number of cellulases such as <i>Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens</i> cellodextrinase Cedl, <i>C. thermocellum</i> endoglucanase CelF, <i>Cellulomonas fimi</i> endoglucanase CenB, <i>Clostridium stercorarium</i> Avicelase I, <i>Persea americana</i> endoglucanase, <i>Dictyostelium discoideum</i> endoglucanase, <i>Cellulomonas fimi</i> endoglucanase CenC, and <i>Pseudomonas fluorescens</i> var. cellulosa endoglucanase A. (Chauvaux, Beguin & Aubert, 1992). | ||
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- | The second enzyme was an invertase. <i>Zymomonas mobilis</i> | + | The second enzyme was an invertase. <i>Zymomonas mobilis</i> is a gram negative bacterium that produces ethanol from glucose, fructose and sucrose (Swings & DeLey, 1977) at a rate three to four fold, and at a higher final yield compared to the traditionally used yeast strains (Rogers <i>et al</i>., 1982). Almost 60 % of the extracellular sucrase activity of <i>Zymomonas mobilis</i> is the result of the activity of the extracellular SacC. This sacC gene expressed in <i>Escherichia coli </i> BL21 exhibited sucrase activity of 1948 - 2672 U/mg while the un-induced strain expressed 12.8 – 24.6 U/mg . One unit of sucrase was defined as the amount of enzyme releasing 1umol of reducing sugar per minute. It is a monomer in its native state, with a molecular weight of 46 kDa. (Gurunathan S & Gunasekaran P, 2004) |
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- | Industrial production of invert sugar is usually based on the acid or enzymatic hydrolysis of sucrose. Acid hydrolysis is based on the application of | + | Industrial production of invert sugar is usually based on the acid or enzymatic hydrolysis of sucrose. Acid hydrolysis is based on the application of strong mineral or weak organic acids. The disadvantage of acid hydrolysis is the possible presence of impurities in the product introduced by uncontrollable parameters during conversion. On the other hand this conversion can also be achieved by enzymatic action of invertase on sucrose with a conversion efficiency of almost 100% without the inherent disadvantages of acid hydrolysis. (Safarik <i>et al</i>., 2009) As an alternative method to the traditional chemical process to produce inverted sugar, cell surface display was suggested. The cell surface display is a technique to display proteins on the surface of bacteria, fungi, or mammalian cells by fusing them to surface anchoring motifs. This technique has a wide range of biotechnological and industrial applications, including development of vaccines, peptide and antibody libraries, bioremediation, whole-cell-biosensors, and whole-cell-biocatalysis. When proteins are expressed in the outer membrane of <i>E. coli</i> the cell envelope acts as their matrix. This display is achievable thanks to several displaying systems as outer membrane porins, lipoproteins, GPI-anchored-proteins, fimbriae, and autotransporters. (Jana S & Deb JK, 2005; Lee SH <i>et al</i>., 2004) Displaying proteins on the cell surface also makes preparing or purifying them unnecessary in many instances. Whole cells displaying the molecule of interest can be used in industrial process reactions or analytical assays and then can be simply recovered by centrifugation. (Joachim J & Meyer TF, 2007) |
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- | The Tat (twin-arginine translocation) system functions to translocate folded proteins across the membrane while the Sec secretory pathway translocates unfolded substrates. The Sec translocase is comprised of the SecYEG translocation channel and the accessory components SecA, SecDFYajC, and YidC. (Yuan J <i>et al</i>., 2010 & Yuan J <i>et al </i>., 2010) | + | The Tat (twin-arginine translocation) system functions to translocate folded proteins across the membrane while the Sec secretory pathway translocates unfolded substrates. The Sec translocase is comprised of the SecYEG translocation channel and the accessory components SecA, SecDFYajC, and YidC. (Yuan J <i>et al</i>., 2010 & Yuan J <i>et al </i>., 2010) Type II secretory system and the type V autotransporter system are natural translocation systems to import/export substrates through the periplasm and membrane. The type II secretory system can take both Tat and Sec system while the type V autotransporters use the Sec system. Sec secretory pathway is composed of an N-terminal Sec-dependent signal peptide, a passenger domain, and a translocator domain that is predicted to form a β-barrel. (Rutherford <i>et al</i>., 2006) Both lpp and phoA signal peptides are natural Sec-dependent <i>E. coli</i> signal peptides which permits the translocation of the outer membrane proteins by the type II and the type V system, respectively. |
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