Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium

The presence of acrylamide in the environment poses a threat due to its well known neurotoxic, carcinogenic and teratogenic properties. Human activities in various geographical areas are the main anthropogenic source of acrylamide pollution. In this work, an acrylamide-degrading bacterium was isol...

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Main Authors: Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus, Gusmanizar, Neni, Ramli, Johari, Shamaan, Nor Aripin, MacCormack, W. P., Syed, Mohd Arif
Format: Article
Language:English
English
Published: Triveni Enterprises, Lucknow 2009
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/11992/1/Journal_of_Environmental_Biology.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/11992/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.119922013-05-27T07:50:38Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/11992/ Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus Gusmanizar, Neni Ramli, Johari Shamaan, Nor Aripin MacCormack, W. P. Syed, Mohd Arif The presence of acrylamide in the environment poses a threat due to its well known neurotoxic, carcinogenic and teratogenic properties. Human activities in various geographical areas are the main anthropogenic source of acrylamide pollution. In this work, an acrylamide-degrading bacterium was isolated from Antarctic soil. The physiological characteristics and optimum growth conditions of the acrylamide-degrading bacteria were investigated. The isolate was tentatively identified as Pseudomonas sp. strain DRYJ7 based on carbon utilization profiles using Biolog GN plates and partial 16S rDNA molecular phylogeny. The results showed that the best carbon sources for growth was glucose and sucrose with no significant difference in terms of cellular growth between the two carbon sources (p>0.05). This was followed by fructose and maltose with fructose giving significantly higher cellular growth compared to maltose (p<0.05). Lactose and citric acid did not support growth. The optimum acrylamide concentration as a nitrogen source for cellular growth was at 500 mgl-1. At this concentration, bacterial growth showed a 2-day lag phase before degradation took place concomitant with an increase in cellular growth. The isolate exhibited optimum growth in between pH 7.5 and 8.5. The effect of incubation temperature on the growth of this isolate showed an optimum growth at 15°C. The characteristics of this isolate suggest that it would be useful in the bioremediation of acrylamide Triveni Enterprises, Lucknow 2009 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/11992/1/Journal_of_Environmental_Biology.pdf Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus and Gusmanizar, Neni and Ramli, Johari and Shamaan, Nor Aripin and MacCormack, W. P. and Syed, Mohd Arif (2009) Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium. Journal of Environmental Biology, 30 (1). pp. 107-112. ISSN 0254-8704 English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description The presence of acrylamide in the environment poses a threat due to its well known neurotoxic, carcinogenic and teratogenic properties. Human activities in various geographical areas are the main anthropogenic source of acrylamide pollution. In this work, an acrylamide-degrading bacterium was isolated from Antarctic soil. The physiological characteristics and optimum growth conditions of the acrylamide-degrading bacteria were investigated. The isolate was tentatively identified as Pseudomonas sp. strain DRYJ7 based on carbon utilization profiles using Biolog GN plates and partial 16S rDNA molecular phylogeny. The results showed that the best carbon sources for growth was glucose and sucrose with no significant difference in terms of cellular growth between the two carbon sources (p>0.05). This was followed by fructose and maltose with fructose giving significantly higher cellular growth compared to maltose (p<0.05). Lactose and citric acid did not support growth. The optimum acrylamide concentration as a nitrogen source for cellular growth was at 500 mgl-1. At this concentration, bacterial growth showed a 2-day lag phase before degradation took place concomitant with an increase in cellular growth. The isolate exhibited optimum growth in between pH 7.5 and 8.5. The effect of incubation temperature on the growth of this isolate showed an optimum growth at 15°C. The characteristics of this isolate suggest that it would be useful in the bioremediation of acrylamide
format Article
author Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus
Gusmanizar, Neni
Ramli, Johari
Shamaan, Nor Aripin
MacCormack, W. P.
Syed, Mohd Arif
spellingShingle Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus
Gusmanizar, Neni
Ramli, Johari
Shamaan, Nor Aripin
MacCormack, W. P.
Syed, Mohd Arif
Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium
author_facet Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus
Gusmanizar, Neni
Ramli, Johari
Shamaan, Nor Aripin
MacCormack, W. P.
Syed, Mohd Arif
author_sort Abd. Shukor, Mohd Yunus
title Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium
title_short Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium
title_full Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium
title_fullStr Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium
title_full_unstemmed Isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading Antarctic bacterium
title_sort isolation and characterization of an acrylamide-degrading antarctic bacterium
publisher Triveni Enterprises, Lucknow
publishDate 2009
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/11992/1/Journal_of_Environmental_Biology.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/11992/
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score 13.18916