Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus
The aim of the presence research work is to discover the degree of dye decolourization by novel white rot fungi isolated from soil at three different sites; agriculture, virgin forest soil and composting in Johore. Initial experiment was performed with 29 white rot fungus isolates and 3 standard str...
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my.utm.613592017-08-30T04:52:19Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61359/ Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus Hanapi, Siti Zulaiha Hatti Kaul, Rajni Aziz, Ramlan El Henshasy, Hesham TP Chemical technology The aim of the presence research work is to discover the degree of dye decolourization by novel white rot fungi isolated from soil at three different sites; agriculture, virgin forest soil and composting in Johore. Initial experiment was performed with 29 white rot fungus isolates and 3 standard strains, namely Phanerochaete chrysosporium (DSM 6909), Bkerjandera adusta (DSM 4710) and Phlebia radiata (DSM 2111). Soil characteristics; pH, moisture, total viable count, total fungi as well as fungal cell morphology were performed during analysis. White rot fungi were isolated and cultivated on solid medium containing indicator compounds that enabled the detection of enzymes peroxidase as specific colour reactions using guaicol. Selected isolates then were performed in solid medium containing 0.2% dyes (Methylene blue and Reactive Black 5) and incubated up to 10 days at 30 °C before the decolourization rate was observed. The screening work resulted in isolation of 26 positive fungal strains. Liquid cultivations of positive strains confirmed that 24 out of 26 dye degrader were found in the screening. Methylene blue was found to be the most decolorized by white rot fungi with 68.52±3.88% compared to Reactive Black 5, 59.91±3.42 %, respectively. There was significance difference in decolorizing for both dyes responded by soil isolates from different locations. But, in comparison among standard strains, non-significance was observed. P. chrysosporium present the best degrader among the other standard strains for both dyes. Analysis of variance for different locations showed that isolates from virgin forest soil was found to be the most significance in decolourization of methylene blue while composting site for decolourization of Reactive Black 5 dye. This study also suggests that plate-test screening based on polymeric dye compound; guaiacol is an efficient way to screening novel white rot fungus. Further identification and ability to degrade various biological products such as lignin and halo-cellulose should be done as essential to find local and efficient white rot fungus to further develop these industrial applications. 2014 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61359/1/RamlanAziz2014_BioremediationofIndustrialDyesBlackReactive.pdf Hanapi, Siti Zulaiha and Hatti Kaul, Rajni and Aziz, Ramlan and El Henshasy, Hesham (2014) Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus. In: 5th International Conference on Biotechnolgy for the Wellness Industry, 10-11 Jun, 2014, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. |
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TP Chemical technology Hanapi, Siti Zulaiha Hatti Kaul, Rajni Aziz, Ramlan El Henshasy, Hesham Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
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The aim of the presence research work is to discover the degree of dye decolourization by novel white rot fungi isolated from soil at three different sites; agriculture, virgin forest soil and composting in Johore. Initial experiment was performed with 29 white rot fungus isolates and 3 standard strains, namely Phanerochaete chrysosporium (DSM 6909), Bkerjandera adusta (DSM 4710) and Phlebia radiata (DSM 2111). Soil characteristics; pH, moisture, total viable count, total fungi as well as fungal cell morphology were performed during analysis. White rot fungi were isolated and cultivated on solid medium containing indicator compounds that enabled the detection of enzymes peroxidase as specific colour reactions using guaicol. Selected isolates then were performed in solid medium containing 0.2% dyes (Methylene blue and Reactive Black 5) and incubated up to 10 days at 30 °C before the decolourization rate was observed. The screening work resulted in isolation of 26 positive fungal strains. Liquid cultivations of positive strains confirmed that 24 out of 26 dye degrader were found in the screening. Methylene blue was found to be the most decolorized by white rot fungi with 68.52±3.88% compared to Reactive Black 5, 59.91±3.42 %, respectively. There was significance difference in decolorizing for both dyes responded by soil isolates from different locations. But, in comparison among standard strains, non-significance was observed. P. chrysosporium present the best degrader among the other standard strains for both dyes. Analysis of variance for different locations showed that isolates from virgin forest soil was found to be the most significance in decolourization of methylene blue while composting site for decolourization of Reactive Black 5 dye. This study also suggests that plate-test screening based on polymeric dye compound; guaiacol is an efficient way to screening novel white rot fungus. Further identification and ability to degrade various biological products such as lignin and halo-cellulose should be done as essential to find local and efficient white rot fungus to further develop these industrial applications. |
format |
Conference or Workshop Item |
author |
Hanapi, Siti Zulaiha Hatti Kaul, Rajni Aziz, Ramlan El Henshasy, Hesham |
author_facet |
Hanapi, Siti Zulaiha Hatti Kaul, Rajni Aziz, Ramlan El Henshasy, Hesham |
author_sort |
Hanapi, Siti Zulaiha |
title |
Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
title_short |
Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
title_full |
Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
title_fullStr |
Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
title_full_unstemmed |
Bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
title_sort |
bioremediation of industrial dyes: black reactive 5 and methylene blue by white rot fungus |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61359/1/RamlanAziz2014_BioremediationofIndustrialDyesBlackReactive.pdf http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/61359/ |
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1643655147569545216 |
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13.209306 |