Bacillus sp. 1 1-IS, a strain of thermophilic acidophilic bacteria, produced an extracellular xylanase during growth on xylan. The enzymepurified from the culture supernatant solution was homogeneous on disc-gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight was calculated to be 56,000 by SDS-gel electrophoresis. The enzyme had a pH optimum for activity at 4.0, and its stability range was pH 2.0~6.0. The temperature optimum was 80°C (10-min assay); however, the enzyme retained full activity after incubation at 70°C for 15 min. The enzyme acted on carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) and cellulose, as well as on xylan. The Michaelis constants for larchwood xylan and CMC were calculated to be 1.68mg xylose eq/ml and 0.465mg glucose eq/ml, respectively. The predominant hydrolysis products from larchwood xylan were xylobiose, xylotriose, and xylose; the release of arabinose from rice-straw arabinoxylan was not detected. CMC was cleaved to cellobiose and larger oligosaccharides. Thus, the enzyme is considered to be an endoenzymewhich degrades the /M,4-glycosyl linkages in xylan and cellulose.
Obligate moderately thermophilic bacilli and obligate moderately thermoacidophilic bacilli contained spermine as the major polyamine in addition to putrescine and spermidine. The identity of spermine was confirmed by thin-layer chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography before and after treatment with putrescine oxidase. Using these methods, thermospermine and spermine can be separated; thermospermine was not present in these organisms. On the other hand, various facultative thermophiles and mesophilic strains of the genus Bacillus, including alkalophiles and halophiles, lack spermine and other tetraamines. No spermine was detected in several strains of mesophilic or facultative slightly thermophilic lactic acid bacteria, Lactobacillus and Streptococcus.
Three strains of acido-thermophilic bacteria were isolated from hot-spring waters of Tohoku district in Japan. They were aerobic spore-forming bacilli and identified to belong to genus Bacillus. Their characteristics were as follows. They were acidophilic, and grew well in the pH range of between 2.3 and 5.0. Optimal growth conditions were 65°C for temperature and 3.5~4.0 for pH of media. Strains T-4 and T-17 required biotin as growth factor, but T-7 did not require any factors for its growth. These bacteria were different from Bacillus stearothermophilus or B. coagulans in their taxonomic properties.
Three strains of acido-thermophilic bacteria were isolated from hot-spring waters of Tohoku district in Japan. They were aerobic spore-forming bacilli and identified to belong to genus Bacillus. Their characteristics were as follows. They were acidophilic , and grew well in the pH range of between 2.3 and 5.0. Optimal growth conditions were 65°C for temperature and 3.54.0 for pH of media. Strains T-4 and T-17 required biotin as growth factor, but T-7 did not require any factors for its growth. These bacteria were different from Bacillus stearothermophilus or B. coagulans in their taxonomic properties.
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