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1.
The ability of the white-rot fungus Ganoderma sp.En3 to decolorize different kinds of dyes widely applied in the textile and dyeing industry, including the anthraquinone dye Remazol Brilliant Blue R (RBBR), indigo dye indigo carmine and triphenylmethane dye methyl green, was evaluated in this study. Ganoderma sp.En3 had a strong capability of decolorizing high concentrations of RBBR, indigo carmine and methyl green. Obvious reduction of Chemical Oxygen Demand was observed after decolorization of different dyes. Ganoderma sp.En3 had a strong ability to tolerate RBBR, indigo carmine and methyl green with high concentrations. High concentrations of RBBR, indigo carmine and methyl green could also be efficiently decolorized by the crude enzyme of Ganoderma sp.En3. Different redox mediators such as syringaldehyde, acetosyringone and acetovanillone could enhance the decolorization capability for higher concentration of indigo carmine and methyl green. Different metal ions had little effect on the ability of the crude enzyme to decolorize indigo carmine and methyl green. Our study suggested that Ganoderma sp.En3 had a strong capability for decolorizing and tolerating high concentrations of different types of dyes such as RBBR, indigo carmine and methyl green.  相似文献   

2.
Blue multicopper oxidases, laccases displayed on the surface of Bacillus spores were used to decolorize a widely used textile dyestuff, indigo carmine. The laccase-encoding gene of Bacillus subtilis, cotA, was cloned and expressed in B. subtilis DB104, and the expressed enzyme was spontaneously localized on Bacillus spores. B. subtilis spores expressing laccase exhibited maximal activity for the oxidation of 2,2′-azino-bis (3-ethylthiazoline-6-sulfonate) (ABTS) at pH 4.0 and 80 °C, and for the decolorization of indigo carmine at pH 8.0 and 60 °C. The displayed enzyme retained 80% of its original activity after pre-treatment with organic solvents such as 50% acetonitrile and n-hexane for 2 h at 37 °C. The apparent Km of the enzyme displayed on spores was 443 ± 124 μM for ABTS with a Vmax of 150 ± 16 U/mg spores. Notably, 1 mg of spores displaying B. subtilis laccase (3.4 × 102 U for ABTS as a substrate) decolorized 44.6 μg indigo carmine in 2 h. The spore reactor (0.5 g of spores corresponding to 1.7 × 105 U in 50 mL) in a consecutive batch recycling mode decolorized 223 mg indigo carmine/L to completion within 42 h at pH 8.0 and 60 °C. These results suggest that laccase displayed on B. subtilis spores can serve as a powerful environmental tool for the treatment of textile dye effluent.  相似文献   

3.
Anaerobic acclimatization of activated sludge from a textile effluent treatment plant to high concentration of RB5 could effectively decolorize RB5 dye solution. The strains viz. Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacillus circulans and other unidentified laboratory isolates (NAD1 and NAD6) were predominantly present in the microbial consortium. The conditions for efficient decolorization, biostimulation to increase effectiveness of microbial consortium, its tolerance to high salt concentration and non-specific ability towards decolorization of eight azo dyes, are reported. The optimum inoculums concentration for maximum decolorization were found to be 1-5 ml of 1800+/-50 mg l(-1) MLSS and 37 degrees C, respectively. The decolorization efficiency was 70-90% during 48 h. The biomass showed efficient decolorization even in the presence of 10% NaCl, as tested with RB5. In the presence of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) more than 99% decolorization occurred in 8h. The decolorization of RB5 was traced to extracellular enzymes. The effectiveness of acclimatized biomass under optimized conditions towards decolorization of two types of synthetic dye bath wastewaters that were prepared using chosen azo dyes is reported.  相似文献   

4.
A novel bacterial strain capable of decolorizing reactive textile dye Red BLI is isolated from the soil sample collected from contaminated sites of textile industry from Solapur, India. The bacterial isolate was identified as Pseudomonas sp. SUK1 on the basis of 16S rDNA analysis. The Pseudomonas sp. SUK1 decolorized Red BLI (50 mg l(-1)) 99.28% within 1h under static anoxic condition at pH range from 6.5 to 7.0 and 30 degrees C. This strain has ability to decolorize various reactive textile dyes. UV-Vis spectroscopy, FTIR and TLC analysis of samples before and after dye decolorization in culture medium confirmed decolorization of Red BLI. A significant increase in the activities of aminopyrine N-demethylase and NADH-DCIP reductase in cells obtained after decolorization indicates involvement of these enzymes in the decolorization process. Phytotoxicity testing with the seeds of Sorghum vulgare and Phaseolus mungo, showed more sensitivity towards the dye, while the products obtained after dye decolorization does not have any inhibitory effects.  相似文献   

5.
Phloroglucinol, thymol, and violuric acid (VIO) were selected as laccase mediators after screening 14 different compounds with indigo carmine (indigoid dye) as a substrate. With the presence of these three mediators, a nearly complete decolorization (90-100%) was attained in 1 h. Thus, these three compounds were used as mediators for the decolorization of other four dyes. The results indicated that VIO was effective mediator in decolorization of Remazol brilliant blue R (RBBR, anthraquinoid dye) and Coomassie brilliant blue G-250 (CBB, triphenylmethane dyes), and Acid red (diazo dye). In presence of VIO, the four dyes described above attained 70% decolorization. Thymol was able to mediate decolorization of RBBR and Azure A (heterocyclic dye). Phloroglucinol has no mediating capability in decolorization of the four dyes analyzed. Mediator concentration, pH, and copper ion have an effect on the decolorization of the RBBR. Our data suggested that the decolorization capabilities of laccase/mediator system were related to the types of mediator, the dye structure and decolorization condition.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the enzymatic action of partially purified bitter gourd peroxidase for the degradation/decolorization of complex aromatic structures. Twenty-one dyes, with a wide spectrum of chemical groups, currently being used by the textile and other important industries have been selected for the study. Here, for the first time we have shown peroxidases from Momordica charantia (300 EU/gm of vegetable) to be highly effective in decolorizing industrially important dyes. Dye solutions, containing 50-200 mg dye/l, were used for the treatment with bitter gourd peroxidase (specific activity of 99.0 EU/mg protein). M. charantia peroxidases were able to decolorize most of the textile dyes by forming insoluble precipitate. When the textile dyes were treated with increasing concentration of enzyme, it was observed that greater fraction of the color was removed but four out of eight reactive dyes were recalcitrant to decolorization by bitter gourd peroxidase. Step-wise addition of enzyme to the decolorizing reaction mixture at the interval of 1h further enhanced the dye decolorization. The rate of decolorization was enhanced when the dyes were incubated with fixed quantity of enzyme for increasing times. Decolorization of non-textile dyes resulted in the degradation and removal of dyes from the solution without any precipitate formation. Decolorization rate was drastically increased when the textile and other industrially important non-textile dyes were treated with bitter gourd peroxidase in presence of 1.0 mM 1-hydroxybenzotriazole. Complex mixtures of dyes were prepared by taking three to four reactive textile and non-textile dyes in equal proportions. Each mixture was decolorized by more than 80% when treated with the enzyme in presence of 1.0 mM 1-hydroxybenzotriazole. Our data suggest that the peroxidase/mediator system is an effective biocatalyst for the treatment of effluents containing recalcitrant dyes from textile, dye manufacturing, dyeing and printing industries.  相似文献   

7.
Recently, it was proposed that neutrophils generate ozone (Wentworth, P. J., McDunn, J. E., Wentworth, A. D., Takeuchi, C., Nieva, J., Jones, T., Bautista, C., Ruedi, J. M., Gutierrez, A., Janda, K. D., Babior, B. M., Eschenmoser, A., and Lerner, R. A. (2002) Science 298, 2195-2199; Babior, B. M., Takeuchi, C., Ruedi, J., Gutierrez, A., and Wentworth, P. J. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 100, 3031-3034). Evidence for the proposal was based largely on the chemistry of ozone reacting with indigo carmine to produce isatin sulfonic acid. In this investigation, we have examined the specificity of this reaction and whether it can be used as unequivocal evidence of ozone production by neutrophils. Stimulated neutrophils promoted the loss of indigo carmine and formation of isatin sulfonic acid in a reaction that was completely inhibited by superoxide dismutase. Methionine, which scavenges ozone, singlet oxygen, and hypochlorous acid, had no effect on the reaction. Neither did catalase or azide, which scavenge hydrogen peroxide and inhibit myeloperoxidase, respectively. From these results, it is apparent that superoxide was responsible for bleaching indigo carmine. Superoxide generated using xanthine oxidase and acetaldehyde also converted indigo carmine to isatin sulfonic acid in a reaction that was completely inhibited by superoxide dismutase and unaffected by catalase. When the xanthine oxidase reaction was carried out in H(2)(18)O, the proportion of (18)O incorporated into the isatin sulfonic acid was the same as that found for ozone. Thus, reactions of ozone and superoxide with indigo carmine are indistinguishable with respect to isatin sulfonic acid formation. We conclude that bleaching of indigo carmine cannot be used to invoke ozone production by neutrophils. Studies using indigo carmine to implicate ozone in other biological processes should also be interpreted with caution.  相似文献   

8.
A Pseudomonas luteola strain possessing azoreductase activity was utilized to decolorize a reactive azo dye (C. I. Reactive Red 22) with fed-batch processes consisting of an aerobic cell growth stage and an anaerobic fed-batch decolorization stage. The fed-batch decolorization was conducted with different agitation and aeration rates, initial culture volumes, dye loading strategies, and yeast extract to dye (Y/D) ratios, and the effect of those operation parameters on azo dye decolorization was evaluated. Dissolved oxygen strongly inhibited the azo reduction activity; thus aeration should be avoided during decolorization but slight agitation (around 50 rpm) was needed. With the periodical feeding strategy, the specific decolorization rate (v(dye)) and overall decolorization efficiency (eta(dye)) tended to increase with increasing feeding concentrations of dye, whereas substrate inhibition seems to arise when the feeding concentration exceeded 600 mg dye/L. In the continuous feeding mode, higher initial culture volume resulted in better eta(dye) due to higher biomass loading, but lower v(dye) due to lower dye concentration in the bioreactor. With a volumetric flow rate (F) of 25 mL/h, both v(dye) and eta(dye) increased almost linearly with the increase in the loading rate of dye (F(dye)) over the range of 50-200 mg/h, while further increase in F(dye) (400 mg/h) gave rise to a decline in v(dye) and eta(dye). As the F was doubled (50 mL/h), the v(dye) and eta(dye) increased with F(dye) only for F(dye) < 80 mg/h. The best v(dye) (113.7 mg dye g cell(-)(1) h(-)(1)) and eta(dye) (86.3 mg dye L(-)(1) h(-)(1)) were achieved at F(dye) = 200 mg/h and F = 25 mL/h. The yield coefficient representing the relation between dye decolorized and yeast extract consumed was estimated as 0.8 g/g. With F(dye) = 75 mg/h, the Y/D ratio should be higher than 0.5 to ensure sufficient supply of yeast extract for stable fed-batch operations. However, performance of the fed-batch decolorization process was not appreciably improved by raising the Y/D ratio from 0.5 to 1.875 but was more sensitive to the changes in the dye loading rate.  相似文献   

9.
A new species of genus Shewanella, Shewanella decolorationis S12, from activated sludge of a textile-printing wastewater treatment plant, can decolorize Reactive Brilliant Blue K-GR, one kind of anthraquinone dye, with flocculation first. Although S. decolorationis displayed good growth in an aerobic condition, color removal was the best in an anaerobic condition. For color removal, the most suitable pH values and temperatures were pH 6.0–8.0 and 30–37°C under anaerobic culture. More than 99% of Reactive Brilliant Blue K-GR was removed in color within 15 h at a dye concentration of 50 mg/l. Lactate was the suitable carbon source for the dye decolorization. A metal compound, HgCl2, had the inhibitory effect on decolorization of Reactive Brilliant Blue K-GR, but a nearly complete decolorization also could be observed at a HgCl2 concentration of 10 mg/l. The enzyme activities, which mediate the tested dye decolorization, were not significantly affected by preadaptation of the bacterium to the dye.  相似文献   

10.
Laccases or laccase-like multicopper oxidases (LMCOs) could catalyze the oxidation of various substrates coupled to the reduction of oxygen to water. In this study, eight strains with laccase activity were isolated from composting samples in different phases, among which strain C1 isolated from the thermophilic-phase sample presented the highest laccase activity. The purified LMCO of strain C1 showed a single protein band on SDS-PAGE gel with a molecular mass of about 38 kDa. The novel laccase showed alkaline resistance and moderate thermostability. The enzyme activity was activated by some metal ions such as Cu2+, Co2+ and Fe3+ at the concentration of 1 mM, while was strongly inhibited in the presence of Hg2+. The LMCO could efficiently decolorize the indigo carmine and diamond black PV with syringaldehyde as mediator, which suggested a great potential for dye decolorization in the textile industry. The novel strain was identified as Streptomyces sp. C1. The finding of new laccase-producing Streptomyces sp. C1 in this study will also contribute to the further explanation of the function of Actinomycetes in the thermophilic phase of composting.  相似文献   

11.
The potential of spent biomass of a hydrogen producing cyanobacterial strain Nostoc linckia from a hydrogen fermentor was studied for decolorization of a tri-phenylmethane dye, crystal violet. The waste cyanobacterial biomass immobilized in calcium alginate was used as a biosorbent and the process variables were optimized for maximum dye removal using the statistical response surface methodology (RSM). Batch mode experiments were performed to determine the kinetic behavior of the dye in aqueous solution allowing the computation of kinetic parameters. Influence of interacting parameters like temperature (25-35 °C), pH (4-8), initial dye concentration (100-200 mg/L) and cyanobacterial dose (0.2-0.4 g) on dye removal were examined using central composite design (CCD) which included two additional levels for each parameter. Second-order polynomial regression model, was applied which was statistically validated using analysis of variance. Ability of the immobilized biomass to decolorize the dye was maximum (72%) at pH 8.0, temperature 35 °C, 200 mg/L initial dye concentration and 0.2 g cyanobacterial dose. Adsorption of the dye on cell surface was further confirmed by scanning electron micrographs of the biomass before and after dye loading. FT-IR studies revealed that decolorization was due to biosorption mediated mainly by functional groups like hydroxyl, amide, carboxylate, methyl and methylene groups present on the cell surface.  相似文献   

12.
In this study crude laccases from the white‐rot fungi Cerrena unicolor and Trametes hirsuta were tested for their ability to decolorize simulated textile dye baths. The dyes used were Remazol Brilliant Blue R (RBBR) (100 mg/L), Congo Red (12.5 mg/L), Lanaset Grey (75 mg/L) and Poly R‐478 (50 mg/L). The effect of redox mediators on dye decolorization by laccases was also assessed. C. unicolor laccase was able to decolorize all the dyes tested. It was especially effective towards Congo Red and RBBR with 91 and 80% of color removal in 19.5 h despite the fact that simulated textile dye baths were used. Also Poly R‐478 and Lanaset Grey were partially decolorized (69 and 48%, respectively). C. unicolor laccase did not need any mediators for removing the dyes. However, T. hirsuta laccase was only able to decolorize simulated Congo Red and RBBR dye baths (91 and 45%, respectively) in 19.5 h without mediators. When using mediators the decolorization capability was enhanced substantially, e.g. Poly R‐478 was decolorized by 78% in 25.5 h. On the whole, both laccases showed potential to be used in industrial applications.  相似文献   

13.
A Box-Wilson central composite design was applied to optimize copper, veratryl alcohol and l-asparagine concentrations for Trametes trogii (BAFC 212) ligninolytic enzyme production in submerged fermentation. Decolorization of different dyes (xylidine, malachite green, and anthraquinone blue) by the ligninolytic fluids from the cultures was compared. The addition of copper stimulated laccase and glyoxal oxidase production, but this response was influenced by the medium N-concentration, with improvement higher at low N-levels. The medium that supported the highest ligninolytic production (22.75 U/ml laccase, 0.34 U/ml manganese peroxidase, and 0.20 U/ml glyoxal oxidase) also showed the greatest ability to decolorize the dyes. Only glyoxal oxidase activity limited biodecoloration efficiency, suggesting the involvement of peroxidases in the process. The addition of 1-hydroxybenzotriazole (a known laccase mediator) to the ligninolytic fluids increased both their range and rate of decolorization. The cell-free supernatant did not decolorize xylidine, poly R-478, azure B, and malachite green as efficiently as the whole broth, but results were similar in the case of indigo carmine and remazol brilliant blue R. This indicates that the mycelial biomass may supply other intracellular or mycelial-bound enzymes, or factors necessary for the catalytic cycle of the enzymes. It also implies that this fungus implements different strategies to degrade dyes with diverse chemical structures.  相似文献   

14.
Synthetic decolorization of dyes through solid cassava residue substrate fermentation with Trametes sp. SYBC-L4 via in vivo and in vitro processes was investigated in this study. Effects of pH and mediator (1-hydroxybenzotriazole, HBT) concentration on dyes decolorization were evaluated. In vitro, decolorization ratios of dyes differed considerably in pH and increased with the increasing of HBT concentration. Crude laccase (50 U/L) derived from Trametes sp. SYBC-L4 decolorized 67.91 ± 1.25 % Congo red (100 mg/L), 94.58 ± 1.05 % aniline blue (100 mg/L) and 99.02 ± 0.54 % indigo carmine (100 mg/L) with 2.5 mM HBT at pH 4.5 in 36 h of incubation. In vivo, decolorization ratios of dyes were not enhanced by usage of the mediator. After 10 days of fermentation, decolorization ratio of Congo red (1,000 mg/kg), aniline blue (1,000 mg/kg) and indigo carmine (1,000 mg/kg) was 57.82 ± 0.84, 92.53 ± 1.12 and 97.26 ± 1.92 % without the usage of mediator at pH 4.5, respectively. Moreover, there was no obvious difference between the in vivo decolorization of aniline blue and indigo carmine in the pH range of 3.0–9.0. Results showed that Trametes sp. SYBC-L4 had great potential to be used for dyes decolorization via in vivo and in vitro processes. Moreover, in terms of pH range and mediator, in vivo decolorization with Trametes sp. SYBC-L4 was more advantageous since laccase mediator was needless and the applicable range of pH was broader.  相似文献   

15.
PCR amplified product containing gene responsible for dye decolorization was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The resulting recombinant strain E. coli SS125 decolorized 200mg/l azo dye (Remazol Red) at 30 degrees C at 255 mg cell/l/h, while the host E. coli (DH5 alpha) had no color removal ability. The dependence of the decolorization rate on initial dye concentration and the maximum rate occurred with the dye at 100 mg l(-1). The decolorization rate of E. coli SS125 was optimal at 37-45 degrees C. Aeration strongly-inhibited the decolorization, but decolorization occurred effectively under static and anaerobic incubation conditions. The E. coli SS125 strain also exhibited excellent stability during reported batch operation.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

Methyl orange, a sulfonated azo dye having various industrial applications was decolorized by three bacteria Bacillus sp. strain AK1, Lysinibacillus sp. strain AK2 and Kerstersia sp. strain VKY1. The effect of various factors such as dye concentration, pH, temperature and NaCl concentration on decolorization was investigated. At 200?mg/L methyl orange concentration, the strains AK1, AK2 and VKY1 exhibited maximum decolorizing potential of 93, 95 and 96%, respectively, at temperature 35?°C and pH 7.0 within 18?h of incubation. These strains decolorized the dye over a wide range of pH (5–10), temperature (15–55?°C), and NaCl concentration (5–20?g/L). Further, these strains decolorize up to 800?mg/L concentrations of methyl orange within 24?h. The dye decolorization efficiency was further increased by using different consortia of these three strains which could decolorize the dye completely within 12?h of incubation. The cell-free extracts of the strains AK1, AK2 and VKY1 grown on methyl orange exhibited the azoreductase activity of 0.4794, 1.56 and 1.01?µM/min/mg protein, respectively. HPLC and FTIR analysis of the dye decolorized sample indicated the formation of 4-aminobenzenesulfonic acid and N,N-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine as breakdown products of azo bond. The high decolorization potential of these bacterial strains individually and in consortia has potential application in remediation of dye effluent.  相似文献   

17.
Coprinus cinereus, which was able to decolorize the anthraquinone dye Cibacron Blue 3G-A (CB) enzymatically, was used as a biocatalyst for the decolorization of synthetic solutions containing this reactive dye. Coprinus cinereus was immobilized in both calcium alginate and polyacrylamide gels, and was used for the decolorization of CB from synthetic water by using a fluidized bed bioreactor. The highest specific decolorization rate was obtained when Coprinus cinereus was entrapped in calcium alginate beads, and was of about 3.84 mg g(-1) h(-1) with a 50% conversion time (t1/2) of about 2.60 h. Moreover, immobilized fungal biomass in calcium alginate continuously decolorized CB even after 7 repeated experiments without significant loss of activity, while polyacrylamide-immobilized fungal biomass retained only 67% of its original activity. The effects of some physicochemical parameters such as temperature, pH and dye concentration on decolorization performance of isolated fungal strain were also investigated.  相似文献   

18.
Decolorization of the textile dyes by newly isolated bacterial strains   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
Six bacterial strains with the capability of degrading textile dyes were isolated from sludge samples and mud lakes. Aeromonas hydrophila was selected and identified because it exhibited the greatest color removal from various dyes. Although A. hydrophila displayed good growth in aerobic or agitation culture (AGI culture), color removal was the best in anoxic or anaerobic culture (ANA culture). For color removal, the most suitable pH and temperature were pH 5.5-10.0 and 20-35 degrees C under anoxic culture (ANO culture). More than 90% of RED RBN was reduced in color within 8 days at a dye concentration of 3,000 mg l(-1). This strain could also decolorize the media containing a mixture of dyes within 2 days of incubation. Nitrogen sources such as yeast extract or peptone could enhance strongly the decolorization efficiency. In contrast to a nitrogen source, glucose inhibited decolorization activity because the consumed glucose was converted to organic acids that might decrease the pH of the culture medium, thus inhibiting the cell growth and decolorization activity. Decolorization appeared to proceed primarily by biological degradation.  相似文献   

19.
Stereum hirsutum, a white rot fungus, has a good growth in solid state fermentation. This was carried on with wheat bran, soy bran and a mixture of both. Mycelia grown on soy bran showed the highest decolorization activity on Ponceau 2R (xylidine), indigo carmine and malachite green. Optimal relationship between decolorization and detoxification of malachite green was 30 g of fresh weight (mycelia plus substrate) in 500 ml malachite green solution, 42 U/l of laccase was measured in this solution. Decolorization was carried on without the addition either of nutrients or mediators. Conditions for maximal decolorization did not agree with those for maximal ligninolytic enzyme production, but effectiveness of laccase activity on decolorization was evidenced by electrophoretic analysis, that allowed laccase identification and its decolorization activity in gels stained with indigo carmine and malachite green, with ABTS as mediator. Detoxification was assayed using the sensible fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium.  相似文献   

20.
Trametes pubescens and Pleurotus ostreatus, immobilized on polyurethane foam cubes in bioreactors, were used to decolorize three industrial and model dyes at concentrations of 200, 1000 and 2000 ppm. Five sequential cycles were run for each dye and fungus. The activity of laccase, Mn-dependent and independent peroxidases, lignin peroxidase, and aryl-alcohol oxidase were daily monitored during the cycles and the toxicity of media containing 1000 and 2000 ppm of each dye was assessed by the Lemna minor (duckweed) ecotoxicity test. Both fungi were able to efficiently decolorize all dyes even at the highest concentration, and the duckweed test showed a significant reduction (p 相似文献   

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