
doi: 10.1007/bf02181757
Studies were made of the polysaccharide-hydrolyzing activity inFrankia (Actinomycetales) grown in synthetic media using modifications of three standard assay procedures. In screening five different strains ofFrankia for cellulase activity, based on the method of utilization of cellulose in liquid culture, only one strain, CcI3, degraded filter paper cellulose to complete disintegration and only under very specific conditions of pH and primary carbon source. When carboxymethylcellulose (CMC) at 1% was used as substrate, all five strains showed the capacity to produce reducing sugars as hydrolytic products. Microcystalline cellulose, xylans and gum arabic were hydrolyzed to a lesser extent. Optimum activity depended upon pH and primary carbon source with pH 5.0 and pyruvate or propionate producing highest activities. In fractionation studies of culturedFrankia, assays for hydrolysis of 1% CMC in liquid medium showed that highest activity was in the enzyme preparation supernatant with lesser activity in the cell-free extract and cell wall fractions.Frankia strain CpI1 showed the greatest total hydrolytic activity against CMC after 2 weeks of culture. Strains ArI3 and CcI3 also showed good activity. The agar plate method for direct dye-polysaccharide interaction proved to be the least sensitive assay method with only ArI3 showing significant activity using CMC as substrate. It appears that theFranka strains grown in synthetic media all showed hydrolytic activity but the degree of hydrolysis of polysaccharides to reducing sugars depends upon strain of bacteria and very specific cultural conditions.
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