BACKGROUND: Millions of tons of feather waste from the poultry industry are disposed of annually despite containing a high level of keratin. The aim of this study was to compare the hydrolysis of non-treated feather waste using three different approaches (whole cell microbial digestion, enzymatic and chemical cleavage) and to test the use of hydrolysates as peptone substitutes in a culture medium. RESULTS: Among bacterial isolates, Pseudomonas sp. P5 exhibited the highest keratinolytic activity and efficiency to hydrolyse raw feather material. The hydrolysates contained up to 301 mg L −1 of free amino acids and 6.2 g L −1 of peptides. Hydrolysates obtained by digestion using semi-purified keratinase from Pseudomonas sp. P5 were richer in amino acids (1191 mg L −1 , 56% essential ones) but peptides were present in lower amounts (up to 3.3 g L −1 ). The third approach was feather treatment under mild alkaline conditions. This provided the highest amount of peptides (17.2 g L −1 ) but a significantly lower level of amino acids, especially the essential ones. CONCLUSIONS: All approaches tested could convert raw feather waste into products of commercial value with proven use in a cultivation medium. The level of peptides, their molecular size and amino acid composition was dependent on the method used.
The present study aims to focus on the bioprospecting of marine macroalgae of Turbinaria species, plenteous biomass of the world ocean. Three types of solvents, i.e., H 2 O, MeOH/H 2 O (80:20, v/v) and hexane/i-PrOH (50:50, v/v), were used for extraction. Both the biological activity and the pattern of present chemicals were characterized. For the cell proliferation assay, the human embryonic kidney 293 cells, cervix/breast/pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and osteosarcoma cells were used. For the antioxidant activity determination, both intracellular assay with human embryonic kidney and cervix adenocarcinoma cells, as well as the biochemical DPPH test, were employed. To complete the information about macroalgae composition, organic compounds were characterized by the liquid chromatography coupled with high resolution tandem mass spectrometry. Attention was concentrated mainly on the lipidomic profile characterization. In spite the fact that any significant antiproliferative effect was not observed for cancer cells, both the Turbinaria species were shown to be good protectors against the oxidative stress of the noncancer cells. Most of the antioxidants were determined in the hexane/i-PrOH extract. As regards the lipids identified, most of them belonged to the triacylglycerols followed by sphingomyelins, diacylglycerols, and polar (lyso) phospholipids. Additionally to fatty acids with 14, 16 and 18 carbons, also those with odd carbon numbers were frequently present.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.