| Literature DB >> 33803896 |
Ramesh Chatragadda1, Laurent Dufossé2.
Abstract
Microbial pigments play multiple roles in the ecosystem construction, survival, and fitness of all kinds of organisms. Considerably, microbial (bacteria, fungi, yeast, and microalgae) pigments offer a wide array of food, drug, colorants, dyes, and imaging applications. In contrast to the natural pigments from microbes, synthetic colorants are widely used due to high production, high intensity, and low cost. Nevertheless, natural pigments are gaining more demand over synthetic pigments as synthetic pigments have demonstrated side effects on human health. Therefore, research on microbial pigments needs to be extended, explored, and exploited to find potential industrial applications. In this review, the evolutionary aspects, the spatial significance of important pigments, biomedical applications, research gaps, and future perspectives are detailed briefly. The pathogenic nature of some pigmented bacteria is also detailed for awareness and safe handling. In addition, pigments from macro-organisms are also discussed in some sections for comparison with microbes.Entities:
Keywords: biological properties; fluorescent pigments; horizontal gene transfer; pigments evolution
Year: 2021 PMID: 33803896 PMCID: PMC8003166 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9030637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1A wide array of pigmented microbes seen in nature. The abundance of the type of pigmented bacteria is depicted in bars based on the available literature. Rainbow bacteria are iridescent. Classification of pigments based on various aspects of biochromes. Chlorophyll pigments are not included in the data as they are ubiquitous. HGT: Horizontal gene transfer.
Figure 2Ecological functions and other applications of important microbial pigments.
Figure 3Acquisition of pigment encoding genes by Archaea, bacteria, and viruses.
Figure 4Cosmopolitan distribution of well-known pigmented microbes in different geographical areas.
Substrates promoting high pigment yield from various microbes are alone detailed herein for further biotechnological applications.
| Organism | Substrate | Pigment | Maximum Pigment Yield | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Peanut seed broth | Prodigiosin | 38.75 mg/mL | [ |
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| Cassava waste | Prodigiosin | 49.50 mg/mL | [ |
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| Tannery fleshing | Prodigiosin | 33 mg/mL | [ |
|
| Ram horn peptone | Prodigiosin | 27.77 mg/mL | [ |
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| Kitchen waste | Prodigiosin | 22.3 mg/mL | [ |
|
| Bagasse | Prodigiosin | 40.86 g kg−1 | [ |
|
| Sunflower oil | Undecylprodigiosin | 7.90 mg/mL | [ |
|
| Liquid pineapple waste | Violacein | 57.90 mg/mL | [ |
|
| Cotton seed meal | Pyocyanin | 9.2 μg/mL | [ |
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| Jackfruit seed | Monascus | 10.2 OD/g | [ |
|
| Grape waste | Monascus | 20–22.5 g/L | [ |
|
| Corn meal | Monascus | 129.63 U/g | [ |
|
| Corn cob | Monascus | 25.42 OD/g | [ |
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| Brewery’s spent grain | Monascus | 16.75 UA500 | [ |
|
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| Peat extract | β-Carotene | 1256 μg g−1 | [ |
|
| Grape must | Carotenoid | 915.4 μg g−1 | [ |
|
| Molasses | Carotenoid | 185 mg L−1 | [ |
|
| Chicken feather peptone | Carotenoid | 92 mg L−1 | [ |
|
| Grape juice | Astaxanthin | 9.8 μg mL−1 | [ |
|
| Mustard waste | Astaxanthin | 25.8 mg L−1 | [ |
|
| Molasses | Carotenoid | 40 mg L−1 | [ |
|
| Coconut milk | Astaxanthin | 850 μg g−1 | [ |
UA: Absorbance units; OD: Optical density.
Figure 5Chemicals structures of synthetic pigments.
Figure 6Chemical structures of important microbial pigments.
Figure 7An illustration explaining the requirement of natural colorants over synthetic colorants.