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Protease production by <i>Aspergillus oryzae</i> in solid‐state fermentation using agroindustrial substrates
165
Citations
20
References
2008
Year
EngineeringGrain QualityRice BranFood ChemistryBiosynthesisHigh Protease ActivityBiochemical EngineeringGrain ScienceSolid‐state FermentationHealth SciencesFood FermentationIn Vitro FermentationBiocatalysisProtease ProductionAlternative Protein SourceFungal Cell FactoryAgroindustrial SubstratesBiomanufacturingBiotechnologyFood EngineeringMicrobiologyFood ProcessingFood BioprocessingSeed Processing
Abstract BACKGROUND: An inexpensive and readily available agroindustrial substrate such as rice bran can be used to produce cheap commercial enzymes by solid‐state fermentation. This work investigates the production of food‐grade proteases by solid‐state fermentation using readily available Thai rice bran. RESULTS: A local strain of Aspergillus oryzae (Ozykat‐1) was used to produce proteases. Rice bran used alone proved to have poor substrate morphology (insufficient porosity) for satisfactory solid‐state fermentation. A certain amount of wheat bran was necessary to improve the morphology of the substrate. The following variables affected protease production: substrate composition, initial moisture content and initial pH. A high protease activity (∼1200 U g −1 dry solids) was obtained on a substrate that had a wheat bran to rice bran ratio of 0.33 by dry weight, a moisture content of 50%, initial pH of 7.5, and incubation temperature of 30 °C. CONCLUSION: Nutritionally, rice bran used alone was as good a substrate as mixed bran for producing protease, but rice bran had poor morphological characteristics for consistent fermentation. A substrate that had a wheat bran to rice bran ratio of 0.33 by dry weight was best for producing protease. Copyright © 2008 Society of Chemical Industry
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