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Isolation, characterization and application of theophylline-degrading Aspergillus fungi.
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- المؤلفون: Zhou, Binxing1 (AUTHOR) ; Ma, Cunqiang1,2 (AUTHOR); Xia, Tao3 (AUTHOR); Li, Xiaohong1 (AUTHOR); Zheng, Chengqin1 (AUTHOR); Wu, Tingting1 (AUTHOR); Liu, Xiaohui1 (AUTHOR)
- المصدر:
Microbial Cell Factories. 3/19/2020, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p1-13. 13p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 5 Graphs.
- الموضوع:
- معلومة اضافية
- نبذة مختصرة :
Background: Caffeine, theobromine and theophylline are main purine alkaloid in tea. Theophylline is the downstream metabolite and it remains at a very low level in Camellia sinensis. In our previous study, Aspergillus sydowii could convert caffeine into theophylline in solid-state fermentation of pu-erh tea through N-demethylation. In this study, tea-derived fungi caused theophylline degradation in the solid-state fermentation. The purpose of this study is identify and isolate theophylline-degrading fungi and investigate their application in production of methylxanthines with theophylline as feedstock through microbial conversion. Results: Seven tea-derived fungi were collected and identified by ITS, β-tubulin and calmodulin gene sequences, Aspergillus ustus, Aspergillus tamarii, Aspergillus niger and A. sydowii associated with solid-state fermentation of pu-erh tea have shown ability to degrade theophylline in liquid culture. Particularly, A. ustus and A. tamarii could degrade theophylline highly significantly (p < 0.01). 1,3-dimethyluric acid, 3-methylxanthine, 3-methyluric acid, xanthine and uric acid were detected consecutively by HPLC in A. ustus and A. tamarii, respectively. The data from absolute quantification analysis suggested that 3-methylxanthine and xanthine were the main degraded metabolites in A. ustus and A. tamarii, respectively. 129.48 ± 5.81 mg/L of 3-methylxanthine and 159.11 ± 10.8 mg/L of xanthine were produced by A. ustus and A. tamarii in 300 mg/L of theophylline liquid medium, respectively. Conclusions: For the first time, we confirmed that isolated A. ustus, A. tamarii degrade theophylline through N-demethylation and oxidation. We were able to biologically produce 3-methylxanthine and xanthine efficiently from theophylline through a new microbial synthesis platform with A. ustus and A. tamarii as appropriate starter strains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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