| Literature DB >> 26150937 |
Abstract
Preparation of the toxin pyocyanin from the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an exacting procedure. Pyocyanin is expensive to commercially purchase. The sellers do not give out the extraction procedure. Classically, pyocyanin preparation involves complicated multi-step P. aeruginosa culturing and solvent transfer extractions. The chemical synthesis first used (1979) has not been adequately described. We devised an easily reproducible protocol which consistently decreases the time taken for synthesis, extraction and purification of pyocyanin, and increases the pure pyocyanin proportion produced. Our procedure:•Involves more purification steps (chloroform/methanol/acidification/alkalinization).•Starts with a different pH (7.4 instead of 7), and lesser concentration of phenazine methosulfate; and retrenches a rotary evaporation step.•Removes 2 lyophilization steps, and entails different solvent proportions for thin layer chromatography. As we have extracted pyocyanin both from P. aeruginosa cultures, and via chemical synthesis; we know the procedural and product-quality differences. We endorse the relative ease, safety, and convenience of using the chemical synthesis described here. Crucially, our "naturally endotoxin-free" pyocyanin can be extracted easily without using infectious bacteria.Entities:
Keywords: Glutathione; Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells; Phenazine methosulfate; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; Pyocyanin
Year: 2014 PMID: 26150937 PMCID: PMC4472851 DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2014.07.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MethodsX ISSN: 2215-0161
Procedural differences between the original procedure and our procedure.
| Procedure step (S) | First description | Our protocol | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Number of variations mentioned | 2 | 1 |
| 2 | High intensity cool white light used | Fluorescent F72T12/CW/HO | Fluorescent daylight Phillips TLD 18 W/54 |
| 3 | Initial concentration of PMS used | 0.5 mg/ml in 0.01 M TRIS–HCl | 1 mg/ml in 0.01 M TRIS–HCl |
| 4 | Starting pH | 7 | 7.4 |
| 5 | Photolysis time | 4 days | 2.5 h |
| 6 | Rotary evaporation | Yes | No |
| 7 | Lyophilization of photolysed products | Yes | No |
| 8 | Sequential acidification/alkalinization, and chloroform extraction-purification | No | Yes (3 times) |
| 9 | Hexane precipitation from chloroform, filtration, methanol elution from filter | No | Yes |
| 10 | TLC plate | Silica gel 60 column (2.5 cm × 82 cm) | Merck – HPTLC Pre-coated Silica Gel 60 Plates |
| 11 | Chloroform:methanol proportion for TLC plate equilibration | 99:1 | 0:100 |
| 12 | Solvent for pyocyanin loading on TLC plate | Methanol | Chloroform |
| 13 | Chloroform:methanol proportion for pyocyanin elution | 85:15 | 0:100 |
| 14 | Lyophilization after pyocyanin elution | Yes | No |
| 15 | Pyocyanin yield from TLC plate | 60% | >90% |
| 16 | Purification steps | + | ++++ |
| 17 | Total time for extraction and purification | ++++ | + |
The key procedural differences between the original protocol and our exhaustively revised protocol are tabulated here. Our procedure substantially decreases the total time taken for the synthesis, extraction and purification of pyocyanin, and increases the pyocyanin proportion produced in the final step. Our procedure involves multiple extraction/re-extraction steps, and more purification steps. It removes a rotary evaporation step and multiple lyophilization steps.
Fig. 1TLC purification of pyocyanin.
Fig. 2Spectrophotometric estimation of pyocyanin concentration.