ImpactU Versión 3.11.2 Última actualización: Interfaz de Usuario: 16/10/2025 Base de Datos: 29/08/2025 Hecho en Colombia
Caracterización de actinobacterias raras, degradadoras de lignocelulosa: Demostración de actividad lacasa en dos aislados de Tsukamurella sp y Cellulosimicrobium sp Characterization of lignocelluloses-degrading rare actinobacteria: Demonstration of laccase activity in two isolates of Tsukamurella sp AND Cellulosimicrobium sp
The physicochemical characteristics of lignin and its compaction with cellulose have restricted the biotechnological exploitation of enormous amounts of plant biomass. Laccases are a subfamily of multicopper oxidases involved in lignin depolymerization. Although they have been extensively characterized in fungi, studies of the diversity and functions of laccases in prokaryotes are mainly on enzyme isoforms of Streptomyces sp. In this work we isolated 20 strains of soil actinomycetes. The laccase activity of 17 of them was evidenced in qualitative assays with guaiacol, and two selected strains were characterized in detail. The morphological evidence and the analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequences suggest that these two isolates belong to the genera Tsukamurella and Cellulosimicrobium. In submerged cultures with shaking, AC01 (Tsukamurella sp.) exhibited a maximal oxidation activity of ABTS (2,2 ‘-azino-bis-(3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonate) of 108 U/L. On the other hand, AC18 (Cellulosimicrobium sp.) that exhibited a higher oxidative activity of guaiacol than the other 16 isolated strains and showed resistance to toxic levels of copper, reached a maximum ABTS oxidation rate of 0.56 U/L. These results