| Literature DB >> 31102103 |
Mehvish Ajaz1, Abdul Rehman2, Zaman Khan3, Muhammad Atif Nisar4, Syed Hussain5.
Abstract
In the present study, class="Species">Alcaligenes aquatilis was found to decolorize 82% <class="Chemical">span class="Chemical">Synazol red 6HBN after incubation of 4 days at 37 °C and pH 7. Maximum decolorization was found under static conditions by using saw dust and yeast extract as carbon and nitrogen source. It also showed promising potential to decolorize mixture of multiple dyes at a rate of more than 86% in 5 days. Decolorization of dye had positive influence on the growth of bacterium as growth rate was increased along with decolorization. The cleavage of azo bond was confirmed through TLC, HPLC and GC-MS analysis. The dye metabolites produced during bacterial treatment are linked to various pathways including ATP synthesis process. The absence of peaks of wavelength 1612/cm and 1532/cm in bacterially treated FTIR sample demonstrated the cleavage of azo bond. Microbial growth in decolorized dye wastewater shows that bacterially decolorized wastewater is unharmful for the growth of micro-flora. The high decolorization ability of A. aquatilis 3c to convert toxic azo dyes into useful end products may find potential applications in the environmental biotechnology.Entities:
Keywords: A. aquatilis 3c; Azo dyes; Decolorization; FTIR; GC–MS; HPLC
Year: 2019 PMID: 31102103 PMCID: PMC6525232 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-019-0788-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Fig. 1Change in color of Synazol red 6HBN as compared to control in flask containing culture of bacterial isolate 3c from the dye contaminated wastewater
Morphological and biochemical characteristics of A. aquatilis 3c
| Morphological characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Shape | Spherical |
| Size | 1 mm |
| Color | Pale yellow |
| Elevation | Non elevated |
| Edges | Smooth |
| Texture | Sticky |
| Gram’s staining | Gram negative |
| Biochemical characteristics | |
| Fermentation | |
| Lactose | –ve |
| Sucrose | –ve |
| Dextrose | –ve |
| H2S production | –ve |
| Nitrate reduction | –ve |
| Indole production | –ve |
| Methl red reaction | –ve |
| Voges Proskauer reaction | –ve |
| Citrate use | ± |
| Urease activity | –ve |
| Catalase activity | +ve |
| Oxidase activity | +ve |
+ve: positive, –ve: negative
Fig. 2Optimization of decolorization conditions for A. aquatilis 3c a temperature, b pH, c incubation condition, d carbon source, e nitrogen source, f inoculum percentage, and g dye concentration
Fig. 3a Effect of growth (O.D) on decolorization (%) of A. aquatilis 3c incubated for 5 days. b A. aquatilis 3c potential to decolorize multiple dyes incubated at 37 °C for a period of 5 days
Fig. 4HPLC analysis of reactive Synazol red 6HBN with a mobile phase of profile of methanol at 1.0 mL/min. The column was C-18 (250 × 4.6 mm) a represents dye chromatogram while b represents A. aquatilis 3c degraded dye products extracted after 5 days of incubation at 37 °C
Fig. 5FTIR spectrum of control dye (Synazol red 6HBN) and A. aquatilis 3c treated sample
Fig. 6Synazol red 6HBN dye enters into the cell (A. aquatilis 3c) by unknown mechanism. Upon entrance into the cell the dye is enzymatically processed into various end products. Most probably, azo group (–N=N–) is reduced, followed by cleavage reaction and different end products are produced. Secondly, desulfonation and oxidative deamination results in synthesis of pyrrolo[1,2-a]pyrazine-1,4-dione derivative which can be used as substrates in amino acid metabolism. The amino acid catabolism can synthesize pyruvate (3C compound) which can be converted into acetyl-CoA. The acetyl-CoA undergoes Krebs cycle to produce NADH2 and FADH2 (substrates of electron transport chain). Moreover, dye desulfonation, oxidative deamination and carboxylation lead to produce phthalate derivatives, which can be transformed into different fatty acids and aldehydes. The phthalate, fatty acids and aldehydes can directly/indirectly enter into fatty acid oxidation reactions (β-oxidation) to produce acetyl-CoA, NADH2 and FADH2
Fig. 7Bacterial decolorized broth used for incubation of a B. subtilis (z-66), b B. megatarium (z-28) and c B. cereus (T358-2) at 37 °C for 48 h. No zone of inhibition was observed in any case