Citation: Suribabu K, Lalitha Govardhan T, Hemalatha KPJ (2014) Strain Improvement of Brevibacillus borostelensis R1 for Optimization of α-Amylase Production by Mutagens. J Microb Biochem Technol 6: 123-127. doi:10.4172/1948-5948.1000132 Copyright: © 2014 Suribabu K, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
AbstractPhysical and chemical mutagens are promising and are used for screening of high yielding strains. The exponential increase in the application of amylases in various fields has placed stress and demand in both qualitative improvement and quantitative enhancement through strain improvement. Ultraviolet light exerts its mutagenic effect by exciting electrons in molecules. The potent UV mutants which showed more than 20 mm zone of starch hydrolysis were screened and selected at 42% of survival time at 80minutes of exposure. The wild strain with fixed parameters yielded (3000 U/ml). The major findings of the strain improvement were out of ten mutants isolated, two (UV-3 and UV-10) showed 3000-4000 U/ml of amylase activity. The % of survival of Brevibacillus borstelensis R1 in Pikovskaya's medium was 25.75% at 120 minutes of exposure. Ten mutants (HNO 2 -10, HNO 2 -30, EMS-4, EtBr-40, EtBr-50, Acr-1, Acr-20, Acr-30, Acr-4 and 5′-FU-50) out of fifty mutants isolated showed 3000-4300U/ml of amylase activity, which was higher than the wild strain. The potent Bacillus species screened from marine water was Brevibacillus borstelensis R1. The α-amylase was found to be useful in bakery, food, fodder for poultry, automation dishwashing and laundry industries.