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  4. A Novel and Highly Active Recombinant Spore-Coat Bacterial Laccase, Able to Rapidly Biodecolorize Azo, Triarylmethane and Anthraquinonic Dyestuffs
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A Novel and Highly Active Recombinant Spore-Coat Bacterial Laccase, Able to Rapidly Biodecolorize Azo, Triarylmethane and Anthraquinonic Dyestuffs

Journal
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules
ISSN
0141-8130
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Blamey-Alegria, J  
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2020.12.123
Abstract
Laccases are enzymes able to catalyze the oxidation of a wide array of phenolic and non-phenolic compounds using oxygen as co-substrate and releasing water as by-product. They are well known to have wide substrate specificity and in recent years, have gained great biotechnological importance. To date, most well studied laccases are from fungal and mesophilic origin, however, enzymes from extremophiles possess an even greater potential to withstand the extreme conditions present in many industrial processes. This research work presents the heterologous production and characterization of a novel laccase from a thermoalkaliphilic bacterium isolated from a hot spring in a geothermal site. This recombinant enzyme exhibits remarkably high specific activity (>450,000 U/mg) at 70 °C, pH 6.0, using syringaldazine substrate, it is active in a wide range of temperature (20–90 °C) and maintains over 60% of its activity after 2 h at 60 °C. Furthermore, this novel spore-coat laccase is able to biodecolorize eight structurally different recalcitrant synthetic dyes (Congo red, methyl orange, methyl red, Coomassie brilliant blue R250, bromophenol blue, malachite green, crystal violet and Remazol brilliant blue R), in just 30 min at 40 °C in the presence of the natural redox mediator acetosyringone. © 2020 Elsevier B.V.
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