4.6 Article

Antidiabetic potential of a peptide isolated from an endophytic Aspergillus awamori

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 120, Issue 2, Pages 301-311

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jam.12998

Keywords

antidiabetic; Aspergillus awamori; bioactive peptide; endophytic fungi; glycosidase inhibitor

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AimTo exploit the potential of endophytic fungi for pharmaceutically important antidiabetic alpha glycosidase inhibitors. Methods and ResultsThirty six endophytic fungi were isolated from Acacia nilotica and screened for the production of alpha amylase and glucosidase inhibitors. Inhibitory activity against both alpha amylase (81%) and alpha glucosidase (80%) was exhibited in an isolate, identified to be Aspergillus awamori. Purification of the inhibitor was carried out on Sephadex LH-20 column and semi prep HPLC. The inhibitor was characterized to be proteinaceous in nature with an approximate molecular mass of 22kDa. UHPLC amino acid analysis indicated the presence of amino acids serine, threonine, tyrosine and valine in the peptide. The purified inhibitor exhibited mixed type of inhibition against alpha amylase and alpha glucosidase with IC50 values of 375 and 5625gml(-1) respectively. The inhibitor was stable over a wide range of pH and temperature. Optimization of process parameters to increase the yield of the inhibitor was undertaken using one factor at a time approach as well as RSM statistical analysis. The interaction of dextrose and proteose peptone for the test organism was significant with first order effect of pH. Increase of 13% was obtained in the inhibitory activity after optimization of process parameters. Mutagenicity testing by Ames test revealed nonmutagenic nature of the peptide. ConclusionEndophytic A.awamori is capable of producing a peptide with alpha glycosidase inhibitory activity. Significance and Impact of the StudyThe inhibitor obtained in this study possesses dual (alpha glucosidase and alpha amylase) inhibitory activity, low IC50 values, is highly stable under extreme conditions of pH and temperature, and is nonmutagenic in nature. By virtue of its properties it can be commercially produced and exploited for better management of diabetes.

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