Abstract:
Rhodanese is a sulphur transferase and the principal enzyme found in single- and multicellular organisms. It is capable of mobbing up cyanide present in waste water arises from
various industrial and commercial processes by catalysing the chemical from a thiosulphate
to a less toxic, thiocyanate; thereby proffering remedy to environmental cyanide pollution.
Hence, the objective of this study was to purify and characterize rhodanese produced from
Aspergillus welwitschiae isolated from battery effluent contaminated soil and assess
bioremediation properties associated with the fungus. A. welwitschiae LOT1 with the highest
rhodanese-producing ability of all the fungi isolated from battery waste water polluted soil
obtained from Ogunpa market, Ibadan, Nigeria was employed for enzyme production
optimization using different culture parameters. The physicochemical properties of the crude
rhodanese were also investigated followed by its three steps purification procedure. The
physicochemical properties of purified rhodanese were also studied. Cyanide degradation
efficiency of A. welwitschiae LOT1 was examined in the presence of different culture
parameters while the factors yielding maximum cyanide degradation efficiency was
employed for fermentation of A. wewitschiae LOT1 biomass in free and agar-agar
immobilized form. The metabolites released were measured by HPLC and the structural
analysis of immobilized biomass was carried out using scanning electron microscope (SEM).
The results showed that rhodanase production was optimum at pH 3 and 27 oC and in the
presence of fructose, casein, sugar cane baggass and 50 mM cyanide concentration. The
crude enzyme revealed optima activity at pH 10 and 70 oC while maximum residual activity
of 66-97% was observed at pH 2-7 and 47-65% at 25-80 oC after 1 h incubation. The
enzymatic activity was inhibited by Ca2+, Cu2+, Hg2+ and EDTA but was not affected by urea at 10 and 20 mM, Km of 165 and 7.001 mM and Vmax of 0.539 and 0.146 RU/ml were
obtained for KCN and Na2S2O3 respectively. An ~58 kDa purified rhodanese had specific
activity of 149 RU/mg and 11.2-fold purification and 3.0% recovery. Enzymatic optimum
activity was observed at pH 7 and 60 oC. It was both thermal and pH stable with maximum
residual activity obtained at 30-50 oC and pH 8-10 with 72-82% and 80% respectively. All
the metal ions and inhibitors investigated except Co2+
, EDTA and iodoacetamide enhanced
the enzymatic activity while it showed preference for Na2S2O3, Na2SO4 and Na2S2O5
respectively. Km of 37.5 and 148 mM and Vmax 0.88 and 1.3 RU/mL. Cyanide degradation
was most efficient at pH 12, 50 oC and 50 mM cyanide concentration. Sucrose and glycine of
all carbon and nitrogen sources yielded maximum cyanide degradation. Other parameters
such as corn stalk and locust bean as agricultural wastes, 1 mL inoculum size and 40 mM
cyanide + 40 mM glucose also enhanced cyanide degradation. Whereas, there was no
significant difference in the time of incubation. Under optimum conditions, A. welwitschiae
LOT1 exhibited almost 100% cyanide removal of 50 mM cyanide with the release of CO2,
NH3 and formamide as metabolites as revealed by HPLC coupled with scanning electron
microscope (SEM) examination which also established efficient removal of cyanide.
Findings revealed that cyanide biodegradation efficiency of A. welwitschiae LOT1 isolated
from battery waste contaminated soil may be due to inherent cyanide-detoxifying rhodanese
and established its application in heavily polluted site.