| Literature DB >> 32488508 |
Wasim Sajjad1, Ghufranud Din2, Muhammad Rafiq3, Awais Iqbal4, Suliman Khan5, Sahib Zada6, Barkat Ali1, Shichang Kang7,8.
Abstract
Pigments are an essential part of everyday life on Earth with rapidly growing industrial and biomedical applications. Synthetic pigments account for a major portion of these pigments that in turn have deleterious effects on public health and environment. Such drawbacks of synthetic pigments have shifted the trend to use natural pigments that are considered as the best alternative to synthetic pigments due to their significant properties. Natural pigments from microorganisms are of great interest due to their broader applications in the pharmaceutical, food, and textile industry with increasing demand among the consumers opting for natural pigments. To fulfill the market demand of natural pigments new sources should be explored. Cold-adapted bacteria and fungi in the cryosphere produce a variety of pigments as a protective strategy against ecological stresses such as low temperature, oxidative stresses, and ultraviolet radiation making them a potential source for natural pigment production. This review highlights the protective strategies and pigment production by cold-adapted bacteria and fungi, their industrial and biomedical applications, condition optimization for maximum pigment extraction as well as the challenges facing in the exploitation of cryospheric microorganisms for pigment extraction that hopefully will provide valuable information, direction, and progress in forthcoming studies.Entities:
Keywords: Carotenoid; Cold-adapted microbes; Cryosphere; Melanin; Microbial pigments
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32488508 PMCID: PMC7266124 DOI: 10.1007/s00792-020-01180-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extremophiles ISSN: 1431-0651 Impact factor: 2.395
Fig. 1Common strategies adapted by psychrophiles to cope with low temperatures and other stresses in the cryosphere
Pigments produced by cold-adapted bacteria and fungi, characterization, and biological activities
| Type of microorganism | Name of organism | Habitat | Pigment | Color | Biological function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteria | Antarctic soil | Carotenoid | Yellow | Regulation of membrane fluidity | Chattopadhyay et al. ( | |
| Sea ice, Antarctica | Carotenoid | Yellow | Membrane stabilization at low temperature | Fong et al. ( | ||
| Microbial mat; multiple bacteria isolated | Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, Nunavut, Canada | Carotenoid, Scytonemins | Yellow | Protection against reactive oxygen species, coping radiations, and other stresses | Mueller et al. ( | |
| Multiple bacteria isolated | Antarctic sites: Pony Lake and Cotton Glacier | Carotenoid | Yellow, orange, and dark rose red | Prevent against freeze–thaw cycles. Protection against UV radiation | Dieser et al. | |
| Leh and Ladakh soil, Himalayas | Carotenoid (Lycopene) | Yellow and orange | Survival strategy in a cold environment | Kushwaha et al. ( | ||
| Scott Base, Granite Harbour, Minna Bluff and Marble Point (Antarctic) | Carotenoid | Genes reported | Cold adaptation by stabilizing cell membrane, resistance to oxidative stress | Dsouza et al. ( | ||
| 30 different heterotrophic pigmented bacteria were isolates | Fildes Peninsula, King George Island, Antarctica | Carotenoid | Yellow and orange | Survival strategy in a cold environment | Vila et al. ( | |
| Novel species very close to | Organic residue of a water tank keeping rainbow trout | Mixture of violacein and deoxyviolacein | Violet | Antibacterial activity and enhance competitive ability | Nakamura et al. ( | |
| ATCC | Decaprenoxanthin (Carotenoid); Lycopene (Carotenoid) | Yellow and red | Photoprotection and light-harvesting | Heider et al. ( | ||
| Anthropogenic cold environments | Astaxanthin (Carotenoid) | Yellow | Antagonistic effect against competitors | Mageswari et al. ( | ||
| Xinjiang glacier, China | Violacein | Violet | Adaptation to extremely low temperature | Lu et al. ( | ||
| 11 psychrophilic | Laigu, Zepu, Renlongba, and Gawalong glaciers in Bome County, Tibetan Autonomous Region, P.R. China | Flexirubin-type pigment | Yellow | Adaptation to extremely low temperature | Liu et al. ( | |
| Yuzhufeng Glacier, Tibetan Plateau, China | carotenoids such as α- and β-carotene, 19′-butanoyloxy-fucoxanthin, fucoxanthin, diatoxanthin, peridinin and zea/lutein, with α-carotene as the dominant carotenoid | (orange, reddish-orange, yellow, pink, brown, and white | Survival strategy in a cold environment | Shen et al. ( | ||
| Genus | Alpine ice cave, Austria | Unidentified | Yellow | Survival strategy in a cold environment | Margesin et al. ( | |
| Thirty-seven heterotrophic bacterial isolates | Franz Josef and Fox Glaciers, New Zealand | Unidentified | Yellow and orange | Survival strategy in a cold environment | Foght et al. ( | |
| Multiple bacteria isolated | Prydz Bay, Eastern, Antarctica | Unidentified | Yellow, red, orange, pink | Survival strategy in a cold environment | Bowman et al. ( | |
| Multiple bacterial isolates are reported | Gulkana Glacier, Alaska | Unidentified | Pink, orange, white, cream, and yellow | Resistance and adaptation to cold temperatures | Segawa et al. ( | |
| Multiple bacterial isolates are reported | Siachen Glacier, Pakistan | Unidentified | Several colors pigments | Adaptation against cold temperature | Rafiq et al. ( | |
| Himalayan Glaciers in Uttarakhand, India | Unidentified | Lemon yellow, orange, brown, violet, pinkish-red and pale yellow | Adaptation against cold temperature | Panwar et al. ( | ||
| Lake Podprudnoye, Schirmacher Oasis, East Antarctica | Violacein | Purple violet | photoprotective role. UV and cold tolerance | Mojib et al. ( | ||
| total of 31 g-positive bacteria was reported | King George Island, Antarctica Peninsula) | Unidentified | Yellow, red, orange, and amber | inhibit potential surface competitors | Leiva et al. ( | |
| Antarctica | (Lo-melanin) melanin | Dark-brown | Protection against UV-B irradiation. Scavenge ROS | Kimura et al. ( | ||
| King George Island, Antarctica | Carotenoids | Yellow and red | tolerate excessive UV irradiation | Órdenes-Aenishanslins et al. ( | ||
| Doumer Island, Antarctica | Different pigments belong to carotenoids group | Red | Antioxidant activity, protection against UV radiation | Correa-Llantén et al. ( | ||
| Multiple isolates were reported | coastal Antarctic Station Dumont d’Urville, European alpine snow pits, Nevado Illimani, Bolivia, and Antarctic Station Artigas, King George Island | Unidentified | Multiple colors | Uv radiation protection | González-Toril et al. ( | |
| Kongsfjorden, a glacial fjord on the west coast of Svalbard, | (Zeaxanthin) carotenoid | Yellow and red | cryoprotective agent in regulating membrane fluidity | Singh et al. ( | ||
| McMurdo Dry Valley, Antarctica | Carotenoid | Orange | Reddy et al. ( | |||
| Caspian Sea | Carotenoid | Red | Afra et al. ( | |||
| Cyanobacterial mats | Antarctic stromatolitic and endolithic cyanobacterial communities | Scytonemin | Photoprotection | Wynn-Williams et al. ( | ||
| Lichen and cyanobacterial samples | Antarctic desert habitats, | β-carotene, Scytonemin, phycocyanin, etc | UV protection | Wynn-Williams and Edwards ( | ||
| Cyanobacteria-dominated microbial mats (several isolates) | McMurdo Sound region, Antarctica | Scytonemin, carotenoids, | Multiple colors | Vincent et al. ( | ||
| Fungi | Several yeasts were isolated | Antarctica (Admiralty Bay, King George Island, and Port Foster Bay and Deception Island) | Carotenoids and Other pigments | Several colors | Protection against UV radiation | Vaz et al. ( |
| Italian alpine glacier (Tonale Pass, TN, Italy) | Carotenoids | Orange to salmon-colored | Protection against UV radiation | Amaretti et al. ( | ||
| McLeod Island, Larsemann Hills, in the Prydz Bay area of East Antarctica | β-carotene (Carotenoid) | Bright orange to yellow-orange | Stress tolerance of UV radiation and extreme cold | Singh et al. ( | ||
| King George Island, Antarctic Peninsula | Astaxanthin, phoenicoxanthin, β-carotene, (Carotenoid) | red, pale-yellow and yellow | photoprotective role | Contreras et al. ( | ||
| Himalayan region of India | Carotenoid (Derivatives) | Dark orange pigment | Survival of the cold temperature | Pandey et al. ( | ||
| Multiple fungal isolates were reported | Batura Glacier, Karakoram, Pakistan | Unidentified | Multiple colors | Adaptation against cold temperature | Hassan et al. ( | |
| Multiple endophytic fungal isolates were reported | Admiralty Bay, King George Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctica | Melanin | Dark blackish | Protection against environmental stresses in cold habitats | Rosa et al. ( | |
| Coppermine Peninsula, Robert Island, in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica | Unidentified | Blue | Cryo-protection of fungus | de Menezes et al. ( | ||
| Zooplankton (Antarctica) | β-Carotenoid | Resistance to ultraviolet B (UVB | Moliné et al. ( | |||
| Livingston Island, Antarctica | β-carotene | Resistance to ultraviolet A (UVA) | Dimitrova et al. ( | |||
| Livingston Island, Antarctica | β-Carotene, torularhodin, and torulene | Antioxidant activity | Dimitrova et al. ( | |||
| (King George Island, Antarctica | 2-γ-Carotene, Torulene, γ-carotene, and lycopene, Torulene, and lycopene, OHK torulene | Pink, pale red, red, orange | UV-C radiation tolerance | Villarreal et al. | ||
| Antarctica | Melanin | Black | Increase resistance in piglets and reduction of morbidity and mortality | Chyizhanska and Beregova ( | ||
| Several yeasts strains | Antarctic biotopes | Melanin | Coal-black | Tashirev et al. ( | ||
| Sedimentary rocks (Union Glacier) Antarctic | Mycosporine | Pink and cream | Protection against UV radiations | Barahona et al. ( | ||
| (King George Island | Carotenoid | Orange | Trochine et al. ( | |||
| Moss samples (Wood Bay, Victoria Land Antarctica | Carotenoid and mycosporines | Resistance to ultraviolet-B (UVB | Arcangeli et al. ( | |||
| 6 yeast strains and 11 bacterial strains | Galindez Island in the Argentine Islands in the north-western Antarctic Peninsula | Carotenoids and other pigments | Multiple colors | UV resistance | Vasileva-Tonkova et al. ( |
Types of pigments from cold-adapted microorganisms, their applications, and chemical structures
| Pigments | Applications | Structures |
|---|---|---|
Lycopene ((all-E)-Lycopene) | Food additives, Antioxidant activities, Antimicrobial activities, and as Sun protector | C40H56 (psi,psi-Carotene) |
Torulene (Torulin) | Antioxidant activity, Cosmetics additives, Anti-cancerous activities, and Antimicrobial activities | C40H54 (3′,4′-Didehydro-beta,psi-carotene) |
Beta-carotene (β-Carotene) | Food colorant, Antioxidant activity, and Precursor of vitamin A in food | C40H56 (beta-Carotene) |
Xanthophylls (lutein) | Feed additives, Protection against free radicals, and use in the pharmaceutical industry | C40H56O ((3R,3′R,6′R)-beta,epsilon-Carotene-3,3′-diol) |
| Prodigiosin | Dyeing agent in the textile industry, Coloring agents in the food industry, Antibacterial antiviral, and anticancer activities | C20H25N3O (4-Methoxy-5-[(Z)-(5-methyl-4-pentyl-2H-pyrrol-2-yliden)methyl]-1H,1′H-2,2′-bipyrrol |
| Melanin | Antibacterial activity against antibiotic-resistant pathogens, Antioxidant activity, and cytotoxic activity | C18H10N2O4 (6,14-dimethyl-4,12-diazapentacyclo[8.6.1.12,5.013,17.09,18]octadeca-1(17),2,5,9(18),10,13-hexaene-7,8,15,16-tetrone) |
| Pheomelanin | Markers in fossils, Antioxidant activity, Photoprotective effects | C34H29N6O12S3 (Pheomelanin) |
| Eumelanin | Antioxidant activity, Biomedical activities | C25H13N3O13 (Eumelanin) |
| Violacein | Dyeing agent in the textile industry, Food industry, Antibacterial, fungicidal and antiviral activities, Antioxidant and cytotoxic activities, Use in cosmetics and medicine | C20H13N3O3 (3-[2-hydroxy-5-(5-hydroxy-1 |
| Indigoidine | As bioindicator, Antimicrobial activities, and the Textile industry as a dyeing agent | C10H8N4O4 (3-(5-amino-2-hydroxy-6-oxo-1H-pyridin-3-yl)-5-iminopyridine-2,6-dione) |
| Scytonemin | Anti-inflammatory and Anti-proliferative drugs, Antioxidant agents, Use in cosmetics | C36H20N2O4 (3E,3′E)-3,3′-Bis(4-hydroxybenzyliden)-1,1′-bicyclopenta[b]indol-2,2′(3H,3′H)-dion) |
Fig. 2Schematic representation of the pigments applications obtained from cold-adapted microbes
Fig. 3Schematic representation of pigment extraction from cold-adapted microbes at low temperature