Isolation and identification of marine strains of Stenotrophomona maltophilia with high chitinolytic activity

PeerJ. 2019 Jan 3:7:e6102. doi: 10.7717/peerj.6102. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Chitin is the second most abundant organic compound in nature and represents a rich carbon and nitrogen source that is primarily transformed by bacterial communities. Bacteria capable of gradually hydrolyzing chitin into N-acetylglucosamine monomers can have applications in the transformation of residues from shrimp and other crustaceans. The objective of the present study was to isolate, characterize and identify microorganisms with high chitinolytic activity. These microorganisms were isolated and characterized based on macro- and microscopic morphological traits. Strains were selected on colloidal chitin agar medium primarily based on a hydrolysis halo larger than 2 mm and a growing phase no longer than 6 days. Secondary selection consisted of semi-quantitative evaluation of chitinolytic activity with a drop dilution assay. From the above, ten strains were selected. Then, strain-specific activity was evaluated. The B4 strain showed the highest specific activity, which was 6,677.07 U/mg protein. Molecular identification indicated that the isolated strains belong to the species Stenotrophomonas maltophilia.

Keywords: Chitinases; Chitinolytic strains; Seawater; Shrimp residues; Specific activity.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Mexican project SEP-PRODEP DSA/103.5/16/14474 with financing and the scholarship granted. Also, the project CONACYT INFRA-2015-01-254256 provided financing for the infrastructure used in this study. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.