نتایج جستجو برای: Fungal Phytase

تعداد نتایج: 55232  

Journal: :Plant physiology 1997
J Li C E Hegeman R W Hanlon G H Lacy M D Denbow E A Grabau

Phytase, an enzyme that degrades the phosphorus storage compound phytate, has the potential to enhance phosphorus availability in animal diets when engineered into soybean (Glycine max) seeds. The phytase gene from Aspergillus niger was inserted into soybean transformation plasmids under control of constitutive and seed-specific promoters, with and without a plant signal sequence. Suspension cu...

2013
Iti Gontia-Mishra Dhanshree Deshmukh Niraj Tripathi Khushboo Bardiya-Bhurat Keerti Tantwai Sharad Tiwari

Phytate is the primary storage form of phosphate in plants. Monogastric animals like poultry, pigs and fishes have very low or no phytase activities in their digestive tracts therefore, are incapable to efficiently utilize phytate phosphorus from the feed. Phytase from microbial sources are supplemented to feedstuff of these to increase the uptake of phytate phosphorus. In the present work effo...

Journal: :Allergy 2002
X Baur S Melching-Kollmuss F Koops K Strassburger A Zober

BACKGROUND Although fungal phytase is frequently used as an additive to animal feed few investigations of its allergenic property have been conducted. METHODS Fifty-three subjects occupationally exposed to powdered phytase from Aspergillus niger were studied. Exposure data and symptoms were registered by the company physician. RESULTS Thirty-eight subjects complained of work-related respira...

Journal: :Poultry science 2008
A J Cowieson V Ravindran P H Selle

The effects of phytic acid and 2 sources of exogenous phytase (bacterial vs. fungal) on the flow of endogenous amino acids at the terminal ileum of broilers were assessed using the enzyme-hydrolyzed casein method. Phytic acid (as the sodium salt) was included in a purified diet at 8.5 and 14.5 g/kg, and each diet was fed without or with a fungal (Aspergillus niger-derived) or a bacterial (Esche...

2017
Paul Wai-Kei Tsang Wing-Ping Fong Lakshman Perera Samaranayake

Candida albicans is a clinically important human fungal pathogen. We previously identified the presence of cell-associated phytase activity in C. albicans. Here, we reveal for the first time, that orf19.3727 contributes to phytase activity in C. albicans and ultimately to its virulence potency. Compared with its wild type counterpart, disruption of C. albicans orf19.3727 led to decreased phytas...

Journal: :Archiv fur Tierernahrung 2000
F A Igbasan K Männer G Miksch R Borriss A Farouk O Simon

The physical and chemical properties of six crude phytase preparations were compared. Four of these enzymes (Aspergillus A, Aspergillus R, Peniophora and Aspergillus T) were produced at commercial scale for the use as feed additives while the other two (E. coli and Bacillus) were produced at laboratory scale. The encoding genes of the enzymes were from different microbial origins (4 of fungal o...

2015
Yueming Dersjant-Li Ajay Awati Hagen Schulze Gary Partridge

This review focuses on phytase functionality in the digestive tract of farmed non-ruminant animals and the factors influencing in vivo phytase enzyme activity. In pigs, feed phytase is mainly active in the stomach and upper part of the small intestine, and added phytase activity is not recovered in the ileum. In poultry, feed phytase activities are mainly found in the upper part of the digestiv...

2005
Dae-Hee Lee Sun-Uk Choi Yong-Il Hwang

A novel fungal strain Aspergillus sp. L117 that produced acid-stable and thermostable phytase was isolated on basis of the clearing zone on PSM plate and the ability of Na-phytate hydrolysis. The phytase of isolate showed a 3-fold higher activity than that of A. ficuun NRRL3135. The Aspergillus sp. L117 produced maximal level of phytase at initial pH of 5.0 and 30℃. The optimal pH and temperatu...

Journal: :Protein engineering 2000
M Lehmann D Kostrewa M Wyss R Brugger A D'Arcy L Pasamontes A P van Loon

Naturally-occurring phytases having the required level of thermostability for application in animal feeding have not been found in nature thus far. We decided to de novo construct consensus phytases using primary protein sequence comparisons. A consensus enzyme based on 13 fungal phytase sequences had normal catalytic properties, but showed an unexpected 15-22 degrees C increase in unfolding te...

2011
P. W. Plumstead

While at first glance the relevance of the title to animal nutritionists may not be immediately obvious, this collaborative research by scientists from Lund University (Sweden) and Genencor studied interactions of phytate with dietary proteins as measured by the formation of insoluble complexes and the suitability of using the phytate-protein complex as a substrate for phytase assays. The autho...

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