• Title of article

    Hydrolytic enzymes in activated sludge: Extraction of protease and lipase by stirring and ultrasonication

  • Author/Authors

    Nabarlatz، نويسنده , , Debora and Vondrysova، نويسنده , , Jana and Jenicek، نويسنده , , Pavel and Stüber، نويسنده , , Frank and Font، نويسنده , , Josep and Fortuny، نويسنده , , Agustي and Fabregat، نويسنده , , Azael and Bengoa، نويسنده , , Christophe، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    923
  • To page
    931
  • Abstract
    Hydrolytic enzymes released by the microorganisms in activated sludge are responsible for the organic matter degradation; however, the optimal extraction procedure of this valuable resource has not been well established until now. The present study evaluates the recovery of protease and lipase from the activated sludge by using stirring and ultrasonication, varying different parameters such as extraction time, concentration of additives (Triton X100, Cation Exchange Resin and Tris buffer), stirring velocity, ultrasonic power and sludge source. Sludge was collected from two urban wastewater treatment plants located in Prague (Czech Republic) and Reus (Spain). It was found that stirring using 2% v/v Triton X100 for 1 h was enough to extract 57.4 protease units/g VSS, and that the same method using a combination of 10 mM Tris pH 7.5 + 0.48 g/mL CER + 0.5% TX100 as an additive allowed to extract 15.5 lipase units/g VSS from sludge collected from Reus Wastewater Treatment Plant. Ultrasonication allowed reducing the extraction time to 10 min for protease (using 2% v/v Triton X100 yielding 52.9 units/g VSS) and to 20 min for lipase (without any additive yielding nearly 21.4 units/g VSS), which makes this method appropriate for the extraction of enzymes from the activated sludge, and suitable to be scaled up for its application in the industry.
  • Keywords
    Lipase , Triton X100 , Ultrasonication , Activated sludge , protease
  • Journal title
    Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Ultrasonics Sonochemistry
  • Record number

    2189748