Extraction and Purification of Lipase and Dioxygenase from Pseudomonas luteola Isolated from Petroleum-Contaminated Soil

Nadia Mahdi Darweesh1, Melad Khalaf Mohammed1
1Department of Biology, Zoology, College of Science, Wasit University, Iraq
Publicado: 29/03/2026
Cómo citar: Nadia Mahdi Darweesh, Melad Khalaf Mohammed. Extraction and Purification of Lipase and Dioxygenase from Pseudomonas luteola Isolated from Petroleum-Contaminated Soil. Cultura Científica, 2026 Issue 24. pg. 33-42.

Resumen

This study examined the recovery and preliminary biochemical characterization of extracellular lipase and catechol-cleaving dioxygenase activities from a bacterial isolate identified phenotypically as Pseudomonas luteola and obtained from petroleum-contaminated soil. Crude enzyme preparations were subjected to ammonium sulfate precipitation followed by gel filtration chromatography. For the dioxygenase preparation, specific activity increased from 15.3 U/mg in the crude extract to 588 U/mg after gel filtration, corresponding to a 38.4-fold enrichment with a final apparent yield of 15.9%. For lipase, specific activity increased from 0.00537 U/mg to 6.99 U/mg, corresponding to a 1302-fold enrichment, while the calculated apparent yield exceeded 100%, indicating increased measurable activity after purification and therefore requiring cautious interpretation. Chromatographic elution profiles showed discrete protein peaks associated with the pooled active fractions. The purified lipase displayed highest activity and stability at 30–35C and near-neutral pH, whereas the dioxygenase preparation showed maximum activity under mesophilic temperatures and around pH 7.0. Taken together, the results indicate that petroleum-associated bacterial isolates can provide enzyme preparations that remain active under mild conditions relevant to environmental biotechnology. The present work should be viewed as a preliminary purification and characterization study; it establishes a biochemical basis for future investigations of enzyme identity, catalytic performance, and direct hydrocarbon biodegradation.

Palabras clave: lipase, dioxygenase, Pseudomonas luteola, petroleum-contaminated soil, purification

Resumen

This study examined the recovery and preliminary biochemical characterization of extracellular lipase and catechol-cleaving dioxygenase activities from a bacterial isolate identified phenotypically as Pseudomonas luteola and obtained from petroleum-contaminated soil. Crude enzyme preparations were subjected to ammonium sulfate precipitation followed by gel filtration chromatography. For the dioxygenase preparation, specific activity increased from 15.3 U/mg in the crude extract to 588 U/mg after gel filtration, corresponding to a 38.4-fold enrichment with a final apparent yield of 15.9%. For lipase, specific activity increased from 0.00537 U/mg to 6.99 U/mg, corresponding to a 1302-fold enrichment, while the calculated apparent yield exceeded 100%, indicating increased measurable activity after purification and therefore requiring cautious interpretation. Chromatographic elution profiles showed discrete protein peaks associated with the pooled active fractions. The purified lipase displayed highest activity and stability at 30–35C and near-neutral pH, whereas the dioxygenase preparation showed maximum activity under mesophilic temperatures and around pH 7.0. Taken together, the results indicate that petroleum-associated bacterial isolates can provide enzyme preparations that remain active under mild conditions relevant to environmental biotechnology. The present work should be viewed as a preliminary purification and characterization study; it establishes a biochemical basis for future investigations of enzyme identity, catalytic performance, and direct hydrocarbon biodegradation.

Palabras clave: lipase, dioxygenase, Pseudomonas luteola, petroleum-contaminated soil, purification
Nadia Mahdi Darweesh
Department of Biology, Zoology, College of Science, Wasit University, Iraq
Melad Khalaf Mohammed
Department of Biology, Zoology, College of Science, Wasit University, Iraq

DOI

Cómo citar:

Nadia Mahdi Darweesh, Melad Khalaf Mohammed. Extraction and Purification of Lipase and Dioxygenase from Pseudomonas luteola Isolated from Petroleum-Contaminated Soil. Cultura Científica, 2026 Issue 24. pg. 33-42.

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Nadia Mahdi Darweesh, Melad Khalaf Mohammed. Este artículo es de acceso abierto y se distribuye bajo la Licencia Creative Commons Atribución, que permite su uso, distribución y reproducción sin restricciones en cualquier medio, siempre que se cite correctamente la obra original.

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