Phylogenetic diversity and biotechnological potentials of marine bacteria from continental slope of eastern Arabian Sea

Publication date: Available online 29 June 2018Source: Journal of Genetic Engineering and BiotechnologyAuthor(s): Arakkaveettil Kabeer Farha, Thasneem TR, Aswathy Purushothaman, Jaseetha Abdul Salam, Abdulla Mohamed HathaAbstractMarine environments are substantially untapped source for the isolation of bacteria with the capacity to produce various extracellular hydrolytic enzymes, which have important ecological roles and promising biotechnological applications. Hydrolases constitute a class of enzymes widely distributed in nature from bacteria to higher eukaryotes. Marine microbial communities are highly diverse and have evolved during extended evolutionary processes of physiological adaptations under the influence of a variety of ecological conditions and selection pressures. A number of marine hydrolases have been described, including amylases, lipases and proteases, which are being used extensively for biotechnological applications. The present study was carried out to isolate marine bacteria from continental slope sediments of the eastern Arabian Sea and explore their biotechnological potential. Among the 119 isolates screened, producers of amylases (15%), caseinases (40%), cellulases (40%), gelatinases (60%), lipases (26%), ligninases (33%), phytase (11%) and Malachite Green dye degraders (16%) were detected. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequencing showed that predominant marine sediment bacteria possessing more than four enzymatic activities belonged to...
Source: Journal of Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology - Category: Biotechnology Source Type: research