Abstract
Bacillus subtilis CBTK 106, isolated from banana wastes, produced high titres of α-amylase when banana fruit stalk was used as substrate in a solid-state fermentation system. The effects of initial moisture content, particle size, cooking time and temperature, pH, incubation temperature, additional nutrients, inoculum size and incubation period on the production of α-amylase were characterised. A maximum yield of 5 345 000 U mg-1 min-1 was recorded when pretreated banana fruit stalk (autoclaved at 121 °C for 60 min) was used as substrate with 70% initial moisture content, 400 μm particle size, an initial pH of 7.0, a temperature of 35 °C, and additional nutrients (ammonium sulphate/sodium nitrate at 1.0%, beef extract/peptone at 0.5%, glucose/sucrose/starch/maltose at 0.1% and potassium chloride/sodium chloride at 1.0%) in the medium, with an inoculum-to-substrate ratio of 10% (v/w) for 24 h. The enzyme yield was 2.65-fold higher with banana fruit stalk medium compared to wheat bran.
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Received: 18 April 1995/Received last revison: 6 May 1996/Accepted: 9 May 1996
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Krishna, C., Chandrasekaran, M. Banana waste as substrate for α-amylase production by Bacillus subtilis (CBTK 106) under solid-state fermentation. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 46, 106–111 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002530050790
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002530050790