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Combatting synthetic dye toxicity through exploring the potential of lignin peroxidase from Pseudomonas fluorescence LiP RL5.
Rathour, Ranju Kumari; Rana, Nidhi; Sharma, Vaishali; Sharma, Nitish; Bhatt, Arvind Kumar; Bhatia, Ravi Kant.
Afiliação
  • Rathour RK; Department of Biotechnology, Himachal Pradesh University, Summer Hill, Shimla, India.
  • Rana N; Department of Biotechnology, Chandigarh Group of Colleges, Landran, Mohali, Punjab, India.
  • Sharma V; Department of Biotechnology, Himachal Pradesh University, Summer Hill, Shimla, India.
  • Sharma N; Department of Biotechnology, Himachal Pradesh University, Summer Hill, Shimla, India.
  • Bhatt AK; Center of Innovative and Applied Bioprocessing, Biotechnology Research and Innovation Council (Department of Biotechnology, Government of India), NABI, SAS Nagar, Sector 81, Mohali, India.
  • Bhatia RK; Department of Biotechnology, Himachal Pradesh University, Summer Hill, Shimla, India.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39103577
ABSTRACT
Untreated release of toxic synthetic and colorful dyes is a serious threat to the environment. Every year, several thousand gallons of dyes are being disposed into the water resources without any sustainable detoxification. The accumulation of hazardous dyes in the environment poses a severe threat to the human health, flora, fauna, and microflora. Therefore, in the present study, a lignin peroxidase enzyme from Pseudomonas fluorescence LiP-RL5 has been employed for the maximal detoxification of selected commercially used dyes. The enzyme production from the microorganism was enhanced ~ 20 folds using statistical optimization tool, response surface methodology. Four different combinations (pH, production time, seed age, and inoculum size) were found to be crucial for the higher production of LiP. The crude enzyme showed decolorization action on commonly used commercial dyes such as Crystal violet, Congo red, Malachite green, and Coomassie brilliant blue. Successful toxicity mitigation of these dyes culminated in the improved seed germination in three plant species, Vigna radiate (20-60%), Cicer arietinum (20-40%), and Phaseolus vulgaris (10-25%). The LiP treated dyes also exhibit reduced bactericidal effects against four common resident microbial species, Escherichia coli (2-10 mm), Bacillus sp. (4-8 mm), Pseudomonas sp. (2-8 mm), and Lactobacillus sp. (2-10 mm). Therefore, apart from the tremendous industrial applications, the LiP from Pseudomonas fluorescence LiP-RL5 could be a potential biocatalyst for the detoxification of synthetic dyes.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article