Proteases Production and Chitin Preparation from the Liquid Fermentation of Chitinous Fishery By-Products by Paenibacillus elgii

Chitinous fishery by-products have great application in the production of various bioactive compounds. In this study, Paenibacillus elgii TKU051, a protease-producing bacterial strain, was isolated using a medium containing 1% squid pens powder (SPP) as the sole carbon/nitrogen (C/N) source. P. elgii TKU051 was found to produce at least four proteases with molecular weights of 100 kDa, 57 kDa, 43 kDa, and 34 kDa (determined by the gelatin zymography method). A P. elgii TkU051 crude enzyme cocktail was optimally active at pH 6–7 and 60 °C. The 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging activity and α-glucosidase inhibitory activity of the hydrolysates obtained from the hydrolysis of shrimp shell powder, shrimp head powder, shrimp meat powder, fish head powder and soya bean powder catalyzed by the P. elgii TkU051 crude enzyme cocktail were also evaluated. P. elgii TKU051 exhibited a high deproteinization capacity (over 94%) on different kinds of shrimp waste (shrimp heads and shells; fresh and cooked shrimp waste; shrimp waste dried by oven and lyophilizer), and the Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy profile of the chitin obtained from the deproteinization process displayed the characteristic of chitin. Finally, the obtained chitin exhibited an effect comparable to commercial chitin in terms of adsorption against Congo Red (90.48% and 90.91%, respectively). Thus, P. elgii TKU051 showed potential in the reclamation of chitinous fishery by-products for proteases production and chitin extraction.


Introduction
Chitin is a natural biological polymer present in the exoskeleton of crustaceans such as shrimps, crabs, and cephalopods, the pen of squids and the cell wall of fungi. The abundance of chitin in nature is second only to cellulose [1] and is mainly composed of N-acetyl-D-glucosamine with β- (1,4) linkage. According to reports, the annual production of shrimp and crab shell waste is 6-8 million tons globally [2]. The waste of shrimp and crab shells containing chitin is one of the main sources of chitin extraction. The industrial extraction of chitin from shrimp and crab shells is broadly done in two steps: deproteinization with NaOH and demineralization with HCl. However, the use of chemical methods to extract chitin causes a high level of pollution. Therefore, the use of microbial fermentation to produce protease to remove protein is a potentially environmentally friendly method [3][4][5].
Proteases are a group of enzymes that can hydrolyze peptide bonds of proteins. They participate in many biological processes involving synthesis and regulation. Proteases are also important industrial enzymes that account for over 60% of the total sales of industrial enzymes [6]. Among protease-producing sources, proteases derived from microorganisms have great potential due to the short growth cycle of the microbes and ease of separation. Besides being commonly used in the food industry to modify protein-rich materials, proteases are also widely used in the leather processing and washing industries [4]. In this study, protease was used to deproteinize seafood processing by-products for the extraction of chitin.
Paenibacillus was originally classified as Bacillus until 1993, and was later revised by Shida et al. in 1997 [7-9]. Paenibacillus elgii was formally proposed as a new species by Kim et al. in 2004 [9]. Like most Paenibacillus species, P. elgii has good antibacterial and antifungal abilities, so it is mostly used for microbial control applications. In addition to synthesizing antibiotics, P. elgii can also produce chitinase and protease through fermentation. Chitin is one of the primary components of fungal cell walls. The fungal cell wall can be hydrolyzed by chitinase to achieve a good antibacterial effect [10,11]. Protease can also hydrolyze proteins to produce peptides with antioxidant or antibacterial effects, exhibiting good antibacterial properties [12]. However, studies on the production and the application of P. elgii proteases for the utilization of marine processing by-products are limited.
With the rapid industrial development, wastewater discharged from factories has become one of the main sources of water pollution. Currently, more than 9000 kinds of dyes have been put into use in factories. According to their solubility and chemical properties, these dyes can be categorized as acid dyes, basic dyes, direct dyes, mordants, vat dyes, reactive dyes, disperse dyes, azo dyes, and sulfur dyes. Because of the low biodegradability of dyes, the traditional biological treatment process of sewage treatment plants cannot effectively treat dye wastewater, making the removal of water-soluble dyes very challenging [13,14]. Currently, there are two main methods to remove dyes: (1) transfer dye molecules to solid or activated sludge, and (2) completely destroy dye molecules [15,16]. Among the dye adsorbing agents, chitin has been wildly reported that have an excellent dye adsorption effect [17][18][19].
In this study, P. elgii TKU051, a protease-producing bacterial strain, was isolated from the soils of Tamkang University using a medium containing squid pens (commonly for isolating Paenibacillus strains) [20][21][22]. The production of proteases by this strain was analyzed by the gelatin zymography method. To determine the potential use of P. elgii TKU051 proteases, its crude enzyme cocktail was used to catalyze the hydrolysis reaction of some proteinaceous materials, and the obtained hydrolysates were used to evaluate antioxidant and α-glucosidase inhibitory activities. There are only a few reports on the application of Paenibacillus strains for deproteinization of chitinous material; thus, this study also suggests that P. elgii TKU051 can be used for the deproteinization of different kinds of shrimp waste.

Screening a Protease-Producing Bacterial Strain and the Production of Extracellular Proteases by P. elgii TKU051
The bacterial strains were isolated from the soils of Tamkang University (New Taipei City, Taiwan) using 1% squid pen powder (SPP) as the sole C/N source [4]. In the protease assay, strain TKU051 showed the highest activity and was selected for further assessments.
To determine the phylogenetic position of strain TKU051, sequencing of its 16s rRNA and homology analysis was performed. Based on the result, strain TKU051 exhibited the highest similarity (around 95%) with two species of the genus Paenibacillus, P. elgii, and P. tyrfis. The strain TKU051 was further taxonomically characterized based on morphological, physiological, and biochemical characteristics [23]. According to the results, TKU051 is a Gram-variable, rod-shaped, motile, and facultative anaerobic bacterium. This strain can produce catalase, α-glucosidase, β-glucosidase, protease, but cannot produce oxidase, and urease. It is also negative for L-arabinose and D-xylose utilization tests. These results cumulatively indicate that strain TKU051 is a member of species P. elgii. In a previous report, P. elgii was described for its ability to promote plant growth, inhibit the growth of pathogenic fungi and bacteria, produce extracellular chitinase, and resist the root-knot nematode [24]. This work, therefore, would further expand the ability of P. elgii for protease production and chitin preparation using chitinous fishery by-products as the unique carbon and nitrogen source.
The production of extracellular protease by P. elgii TKU051 on the SPP-containing medium is shown in Figure 1a. The maximal protease production was observed to be 14.10 U/mL on day 4, 15.07 U/mL on day five, and 12.91 U/mL on day six. The secretome of P. elgii TKU051 over SPP-containing medium was examined by SDS-PAGE containing 0.05% gelatin to identify the protease expression. As shown in Figure 1b, P. elgii TKU051 secreted at least four proteases of molecular weights (MWs) of 100 kDa, 57 kDa, 43 kDa, and 34 kDa. Of these, the 100 kDa and 43 kDa proteases were observed to be the major contributors of the proteolytic activity of the supernatant when these enzymes produced gelatin hydrolysis bands stronger than those produced by 57 kDa and 34 kDa proteases. The summary of the MW of the proteases generated by the Paenibacillus genus is shown in Table 1. Similar to P. elgii TKU051, several Paenibacillus strains such as P. larvae, P. polymyxa SCE2, and P. peoriae NRRL BD-62 were found to secrete four proteases into the culture medium [25,26]. However, the MW profiles of the proteases produced by P. elgii TKU052 were different from those produced by the strains listed above. There are only a few reports of protease produced by P. elgii. Kim et al. (2019) reported that P. elgii HOA73 could produce a protease, although its MW was not determined [27]. Thus, this result is a significant contribution to the knowledge of proteases of the Paenibacillus genus.  The effect of temperature on the crude enzyme cocktail of P. elgii TKU051 is graphically presented in Figure 2. The protease activity was the highest at 60 • C and drastically decreased at higher temperatures, indicating that the optimal temperature of the crude enzyme cocktail is 60 • C. Likewise, several proteases from Paenibacillus have an optimum temperature at 60 • C, such as P. mucilaginosus TKU032 [19] and Paenibacillus sp. TKU052 [21]. The crude enzyme cocktail was thermally stable up to 60 • C and retained over 70% of its original activity at 70 • C, indicating its high thermo-stability. The optimal pH of the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail was determined in different buffer solutions (pH 3-12). The optimal pH was found to be 6-7 and it exhibited a high level of activity (over 70% of relative activity) from pH 6 to 11. In accordance with results similar to some alkaline proteases in previous studies [4,34], it can be speculated that the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail contains alkaline protease. The wide optimal pH range and pH stability of the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail may provide it with a greater ability to act at various pH conditions.

Effect of Metal Ions, Inhibitors, Surfactants, and Reducing Agents
The effects of metal ions, inhibitors, surfactants, and reducing agents on the protease activity of P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail are listed in Table 2. Among them, Ba 2+ showed no significant effect, while Fe 2+ slightly inhibited the protease activity (retained 87.24% of the activity). Cu 2+ and Zn 2+ could completely inhibit the enzyme activity whereas Mg 2+ and Ca 2+ could slightly enhance (113.34 and 108.12%, respectively) the protease activity of P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail. Notably, Mn 2+ could strongly enhance (364.04%) the protease activity of P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail. The enzymes also showed a high tolerance to nonionic surfactants (Tween 20, Tween 40, and Triton X-100) and could even increase the protease activity of the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail (177.26, 204.59 and 127.96%, respectively). However, strong ionic surfactants such as SDS strongly inhibited the enzyme activity at 2 mM (22.50%). A reducing agent such as β-ME (β-mercaptoethanol) also partially inhibited protease activity at a concentration of 2 mM (88.91%). EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) and PMSF (phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride), a metalloprotease inhibitor and a serine protease inhibitor, respectively, could effectively inhibit the protease activity (20.16 and 52.81%, respectively). Thus, these results indicate that the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail may contain metalloprotease and serine protease. Other metalloproteases and serine proteases produced by Paenibacillus have been reported [19,22,28].

Substrate Specificity
The protease activity of the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail on various substrates was examined and the results are summarized in Table 3. The P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail displayed activity in the order of casein > keratin > hemoglobin > albumin > myoglobin > fibrin > elastin > gelatin. A higher activity (58.85%) on keratin indicated the potential of P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail to be used in the leather industry for de-hairing. Some proteinaceous materials such as shrimp shell powder (SSP), shrimp head powder (SHP), shrimp meat powder (SMP), fish head powder (FHP), and soya bean powder (SBP) were also used as the substrate for the P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail to examine its protease activity on other substrates. P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail expressed 28.49-44.50% of the protease activity on these materials compared to a casein substrate. This indicates that P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail may be employed to obtain hydrolysates from SSP, SHP, SMP, FHP, and SBP. 2.3. Evaluation of the 2,2-Diphenyl-1-Picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) Radical Scavenging Activity and α-Glucosidase Inhibitory Activity of Some Proteinaceous Material Hydrolysates SSP, SHP, SMP, FHP, and SBP were hydrolyzed by P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail for 4 h to obtain hydrolysate solutions. The mixture of the proteinaceous materials and the enzyme cocktail at 0 h was also used as the control group. The hydrolysis process was eliminated by heating the mixture of enzyme and material at 100 • C for 10 min.
Antioxidant-rich foods can support the human body against the negative impacts of free radicals. Among them, bioactive peptides are potent antioxidants used in food and medicines [35]. The antioxidant property of peptides is related to their radical scavenging capacity [36]. Thus, DPPH radical scavenging activity assay was used to explore the antioxidant activity of the hydrolysates from SSP, SHP, SMP, FHP, and SBP. As shown in Figure 3a, all the hydrolysate solutions exhibited a higher DPPH radical scavenging activity than their initial materials. This indicates that the activity of P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail on the material could release antioxidant peptides into the solution. Among them, hydrolysates of FHP and SBP exhibited better antioxidant activity than those of others, and also exhibited over 70% of the DPPH radical scavenging activity. The α-glucosidase inhibitor may regulate blood glucose levels and, as a result, prevent the onset of diabetes [37]. In this study, the hydrolysates of SSP, SHP, SMP, FHP, and SBP were used to explore α-glucosidase inhibitory activity, and the results are shown in Figure 3b. All the hydrolysates and their starting materials exhibited α-glucosidase inhibitory activity in a range of 24.11-37.39%. The hydrolysates of SPP, SHP and SBP exhibited higher α-glucosidase inhibitory activity than their initial materials, while the hydrolysates from SMP, FMP, and FHP showed lower results. The difference in the αglucosidase inhibitory activity among the hydrolysates and starting materials may relate to their amino acid compositions and sizes [38]. In this study, the SBP hydrolysate exhibited the highest α-glucosidase inhibitory activity (37.39%). Thus, these results suggest that SBP hydrolysates produced by P. elgii TKU05s crude enzyme cocktail can potentially become antioxidant and α-glucosidase inhibitor candidates. One of the applications of protease-producing bacterial strains is in the deproteinization step of chitin preparation. Further investigation indicated that P. elgii TKU051 could produce chitinase (a maximal chitinase activity of 0.74 U/mL on day five of the fermentation period) on SPP-containing medium, whereas insignificant chitinolytic activity was observed when culturing this strain on shrimp head powder-containing medium and shrimp shells powder-containing medium. Thus, P. elgii TKU051 could be used to remove protein from shrimp waste, such as the heads and the shells. Likewise, shrimp waste is often used as sources of chitin extraction due to their large yield and low price. For deproteinization using P. elgii TKU051, fresh and cooked shrimp wastes (shells and heads) with different drying processes were chosen. They included fresh shrimp heads dried in an oven (fSHO), fresh shrimp heads dried by a lyophilizer (fSHL), fresh shrimp shells dried in an oven (fSSO), fresh shrimp shells dried by a lyophilizer (fSSL), cooked shrimp heads dried in an oven (cSHO), cooked shrimp heads dried by a lyophilizer (cSHL), cooked shrimp shells dried in an oven (cSSO), and cooked shrimp shells dried by a lyophilizer (cSSL) The results are shown in Table 4. The deproteinization rate of all types of shrimp waste reached about 94.36-96.86% after seven days of fermentation, and the residual protein of the shrimp wastes after fermentation was about 1.51-2.68%. Compared to other reports, shrimp waste showed a broad range of deproteinization rate, such as 95% (Brevibacillus parabrevis TKU046) [4], 97.9% (Pediococcus acidilactici CFR2182) [39], 84% (B. subtilis) [40], 40-72% (Pseudomonas aeruginosa K-187) [3], and 45% (P. mucilaginosus TKU032) [19]. These results indicate that using P. elgii TKU051 fermented shrimp waste has a high potential to remove protein, and the kinds of shrimp waste may not significantly affect the protein removal capability. The protease productivity of P. elgii TKU051 on different kinds of shrimp waste is shown in Figure 4. Among the shrimp waste, P. elgii TKU051 expressed higher protease activity on fSSO (70 U/mL, on day five) and fSSL (70 U/mL on day six). Additionally, the cooking process may affect the protease expression of P. elgii TKU051 when the enzyme production on fresh shrimp shells was higher than cooked ones (Figure 4a,b). By using an oven, the need for equipment is reduced compared to using a lyophilizer, and a large number of samples can be processed at one time. Thus, fSSO was selected as the material for further assays.

Chitin Extraction after Liquid Fermentation
The solid residue obtained after fermentation was converted to chitin after demineralization by strong acid (2N HCl) then subjected to subsequent analysis. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) was used to analyze the quality of prepared chitins and their intermediate products by using commercial chitin (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) as a control. As shown in Figure 6, the prepared chitin was found to be an α-chitin based on the OH and NH stretching vibration at 3443 and 3267 cm −1 , symmetric stretching vibration of CH, CH 3 and the asymmetric stretching vibration of CH 2 at 2891 to 2962 cm −1 , deformation of CH 3 and the wagging of CH (Amide III) at 1380 and 1313 cm -1 , and asymmetric oxo bridge and C-O stretching vibration at 1030 to 1157 cm −1 [41,42]. Finally, the peaks at 1662, 1626, and 1558 cm −1 represented amide I and amide II, respectively [1,43]. The chitins prepared by chemical method and fermentation method were almost similar to the commercially available chitin, indicating that deproteinization by TKU051 fermentation did not significantly change the structure of chitin. Therefore, chitin extraction from fSSO by P. elgii TKU051 could be feasible.

Dyes Adsorption Ability of Chitins
Dyes are used by different industries to color their products, but the limited fixation capacity often results in the generation of a large amount of dye wastewater that is discharged into the river and causes huge problems of pollution [44,45]. Common treatment methods, including radiation, ion exchange, filtration, chemical destruction, are categorized into physical methods, chemical methods, and biological methods according to their properties [46]. Nevertheless, these methods are usually expensive. Therefore, at present, the adsorption method is primarily used to remove the dye in the water body. It has been reported that seafood processing by-products can be used as effective adsorbents after some modification [47][48][49]. As shown in Figure 7, although the raw material fSSO showed some adsorption effect on Congo Red, naphthol blue-black, and red no. 7, the reclamation of the containing proteins and prevention of the protein caused secondary pollution during the adsorption process. Therefore, the fSSO deproteinized by P. elgii TKU051 fermentation and then demineralized by acid (F-chitin) were also carried out to estimate the dye adsorption effect compared with that of commercial chitin. The results showed that the effect of F-chitin was comparable to that of commercial chitin on the adsorption against Congo Red (90.48 and 90.91%, respectively). Considering the other dyes, commercial chitin expressed a higher adsorption capacity than F-chitin and fermented fSSO (F-fSSO). Several reports have shown that chitin has a high adsorption capability on Congo Red [19]. The dye adsorption capacity of chitin may be related to its porous structure, functional groups, and the degree of deacetylation [50,51]. In this study, by showing a comparable Congo Red adsorption rate, the chitin from F-fSSO may hold great potential in removing this dye from wastewater.

Materials
Squid pens and shrimp processing wastes (shrimp heads, shrimp shells) were obtained from Shin-Ma Frozen Food Co. (I-Lan, Taiwan) and Sunmake Enterprise Co. (Taipei, Taiwan). Cooked shrimp heads and cooked shrimp shells were obtained by treating shrimp wastes at 100 • C for 20 min, and then drying in an oven (at 70 • C for 48 h), or by lyophilization, respectively. Azocasein, β-ME, PMSF, Congo Red, and naphthol blueblack were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich Co. (St. Louis, MO, USA). Red no.6, Red no.7, Red no.40, Blue no.2, Yellow no.4, and Yellow no.5 were purchased from First Chemical Works Co. (Taipei, Taiwan). All other reagents used in this study were of the highest grade available.

Isolation and Identification of Protease-Producing Bacteria
The strain was isolated from the soil of Tamkang University (New Taipei, Taiwan). The soil samples were serially diluted with 0.9% saline and spread on SPP-containing medium (1% SPP, 0.1% K 2 HPO 4 , 0.05% MgSO 4 ·7H 2 O, w/v) with 1.5% (w/v) agar, and incubated for 48 h [21]. The single colonies were combined with 100 mL of SPP-containing medium then incubated for 72 h. The culture supernatant was collected for the analysis of protease activity. The strain with the highest protease activity was identified through morphological, physiological, and biochemical properties, as well as 16s rRNA sequencing.

Measurement of Protease Activity
Fifty µL of a 1% (w/v) azocasein solution were added to 50 µL of cell-free supernatant (containing protease) and the mixture was immediately incubated at 37 • C for 30 min. The reaction was stopped by mixing with 300 µL of 5% (w/v) trichloroacetic acid (TCA, Katayama Chemical, Osaka, Japan). Finally, the sample was centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 10 min and 150 µL of the supernatant was mixed with an equal amount of 0.5 N NaOH. The absorbance of the mixture was measured at 450 nm using a Microplate Absorbance Reader (BIO-RAD, Hercules, CA, USA). One unit was defined as an increase of A 450 nm of 0.01 after incubation for 1 min [52][53][54].

Gel Electrophoresis
Zymography was performed on a 12.5% resolving gel containing 0.05% gelatin. After electrophoresis, the gels were rinsed in 5% Triton X-100 for 1 h at room temperature and rinsed in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7) for 1 h. The gels were then rinsed in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7) and incubated at 37 • C for 1 day. The gels were stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 (CBR, Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA).

Effect of Temperature and pH on Protease Activity and Stability
The optimal temperature of the protease was assessed by incubating the enzyme and substrate mixture at different temperatures (30-100 • C) for 30 min. The thermal stability was determined through the residual activity after pretreating the enzyme under different temperatures for 30 min. The optimal pH was determined using a range of buffers including citrate acetate (pH 3-6), Tris-HCl (pH 7-9), Na 2 CO 3 -NaHCO 3 (pH 9-11), Na 2 PO 4 -NaOH (pH 12). The pH stability was investigated by pretreating the enzyme at different pH and measuring the residual activity at pH 7.

Effect of Various Chemicals on the Activity of Protease
The enzyme was pretreated with various metal ion salts, β-ME, inhibitor (PMSF and EDTA from Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA), and surfactants (Tween 20, Tween 40, and Triton X-100, from Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) for 30 min at room temperature. After that, the substrate was added to the mixture and the residual protease activity was tested.

Substrate Specificity
Various substrates were used to investigate the substrate specificity of P. elgii TKU051 protease, including albumin, hemoglobin, keratin, myoglobin, elastin, gelatin, fibrin, casein, SSP, SHP, SMP, FHP, and SBP. Casein was used as a control for determining substrate specificity. Protease assay and substrate specificity were determined following the Todd method [29].

α-Glucosidase Inhibitory Activity
α-glucosidase inhibitory activity was analyzed following the method of Tran et al. [56].

Fermentation Conditions
P elgii TKU051 was grown in a 250 mL flask containing 100 mL of the liquid medium (1% each kind of shrimp waste, 0.1% K 2 HPO 4 , 0.05% MgSO 4 ·7H 2 O, w/v) at 37 • C, and 150 rpm for 7 days. The nonfermentation group was prepared in similar conditions (mentioned above) with the exception that the bacterial strain was not inoculated in the medium. The shrimp wastes were fSHO, fSHL, fSSO, fSSL, cSHO, cSHL, cSSO, and cSSL.

Deproteinization Assay
Deproteinization of shrimp waste was examined through the fermentation method and the alkali method. In the fermentation method, 1% of TKU051 seed culture was added into basal medium containing 1% (w/v) of shrimp waste and incubated at 37 • C and 150 rpm for a week. In the alkali method, 1 g of sample was mixed with 50 mL of 5% NaOH (w/v). The mixture was allowed to react at 80 • C for 4 h then centrifuged at 1000 rpm for 10 min. The supernatant was then used to analyze the protein concentration by the Lowry method [57,58]. The rate of deproteinization was calculated by following [59]: where P o and P R are protein content (%) before and after deproteinization while O and R are the dry weight of the sample before and after deproteinization.

Chitin Extraction
The solid residue obtained after deproteinization was washed with water and dried in an oven at 70 • C. One gram of sample was mixed with 10 mL of 2N HCl at room temperature for 1 h. The precipitate was washed with water until neutral pH was obtained.

FTIR Analysis
Chitins and their mid-products recovered from shrimp waste were analyzed by FTIR spectrometer (Tensor 27, Bruker, Ettlingen, Germany) for characterization. Spectra were collected from 4000 to 400 cm −1 following the KBr method.

Dye Adsorption
Ten milligrams of adsorbent were mixed with 5 mL of dye solution (0.002%, w/v) in a centrifugation tube then placed on a rotary shaker at 150 rpm for 1 h. The mixture was centrifugated at 6000 rpm for 10 min. The absorbance of the mixture was measured by an ELISA reader (Epoch, Bio Teck, Winooski, VT, USA). The maximum absorption wavelengths of Congo Red, Naphthol blue-black, Red No. 6, Red No. 7, Red No. 40, Blue no.2, Yellow No. 4, and Yellow No. 5 were 490, 620, 510, 530, 550, 610, 430, and 480 nm, respectively. The adsorption rate was calculated using the following formula: Adsorption rate (%) = [(C − S)/C] × 100% (2) where C is absorbance before adsorption and S is absorbance after adsorption.

Conclusions
Chitinous fishery by-products are available in large quantities and are low in price. The use of these materials for enzyme and chitin production via a microbial conversion method could increase their economic value and also help in preventing pollution caused by the acid/alkali used for demineralization/deproteinization. In this study, the production of the proteases of P. elgii TKU051 on an SPP-containing medium was explored by gelatin zymography analysis. Following that, four proteases of MWs 100, 57, 43 and 34 kDa were detected in the culture supernatant of P. elgii TKU051. Additionally, the hydrolysates prepared from P. elgii TKU051 crude enzyme cocktail possessed antioxidant and α-glucosidase inhibitory activities, and the deproteinization capacity of P. elgii TKU051 on different kinds of shrimp waste exhibited a high value (over 94%). The chitin prepared from the deproteinization of fSSO using P. elgii TKU051 was characterized by FTIR analysis and revealed a pattern similar to that of high-grade commercially available chitin. Finally, the obtained chitin exhibited potential dye adsorption capacity on Congo Red. Hence, P. elgii TKU051 could be an efficient candidate for the conversion process of chitinous fishery by-products to produce proteases and chitin.

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.