Fusarium verticillioides pigment: production, response surface optimization, gamma irradiation and encapsulation studies.


Journal

BMC biotechnology
ISSN: 1472-6750
Titre abrégé: BMC Biotechnol
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101088663

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 Oct 2024
Historique:
received: 10 03 2024
accepted: 07 10 2024
medline: 30 10 2024
pubmed: 30 10 2024
entrez: 30 10 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Natural pigments are becoming more significant because of the rising cost of raw materials, pollution, and the complexity of synthetic pigments. Compared to synthetic pigments, natural pigments exhibit antimicrobial properties and is less allergic. Pigments from microbial sources could easily be obtained in an inexpensive culture media, produced in high yields, and microbes are capable of producing different colored pigments. Searching for new sources for natural pigments to replace synthetic ones in food applications has become an urgent necessity, but the instability of these compounds is sometimes considered one of the obstacles that reduce their application. Encapsulation provides an ideal solution for natural dye protection through a controlled release strategy. Thus, this study aims at isolation of several soil fungi and subsequent screening their pigment production ability. The chosen pigment-producing fungal strain underwent full identification. The produced pigment was extracted with ethyl acetate and estimated spectrophotometrically. As there is a necessity to obtain a high pigment yield for efficient industrial application, the best production medium was tested, optimum conditions for maximum dye production were also investigated through the response surface methodology, and gamma irradiation was also employed to enhance the fungal productivity. Encapsulation of the produced pigment into chitosan microsphere was tested. The pigment release under different pH conditions was also investigated. A new strain, Fusarium verticillioides AUMC 15934 was chosen and identified for a violet pigment production process. Out of four different media studied, the tested strain grew well on potato dextrose broth medium. Optimum conditions are initial medium pH 8, 25 °C-incubation temperature, and for 15-day incubation period under shaking state. Moreover, a 400 Gy irradiation dose enhanced the pigment production. Chitosan microsphere loaded by the pigment was successfully prepared and characterized by infrared spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy. This irradiated Fusarium strain provides a more economically favorable source for production of a natural violet dye with an optimum productivity, enhanced yield, and improved properties (such as, enhanced stability, controlled release, and bioaccessibility) by encapsulation with chitosan for efficient application in food industry.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Natural pigments are becoming more significant because of the rising cost of raw materials, pollution, and the complexity of synthetic pigments. Compared to synthetic pigments, natural pigments exhibit antimicrobial properties and is less allergic. Pigments from microbial sources could easily be obtained in an inexpensive culture media, produced in high yields, and microbes are capable of producing different colored pigments. Searching for new sources for natural pigments to replace synthetic ones in food applications has become an urgent necessity, but the instability of these compounds is sometimes considered one of the obstacles that reduce their application. Encapsulation provides an ideal solution for natural dye protection through a controlled release strategy. Thus, this study aims at isolation of several soil fungi and subsequent screening their pigment production ability. The chosen pigment-producing fungal strain underwent full identification. The produced pigment was extracted with ethyl acetate and estimated spectrophotometrically. As there is a necessity to obtain a high pigment yield for efficient industrial application, the best production medium was tested, optimum conditions for maximum dye production were also investigated through the response surface methodology, and gamma irradiation was also employed to enhance the fungal productivity. Encapsulation of the produced pigment into chitosan microsphere was tested. The pigment release under different pH conditions was also investigated.
RESULTS RESULTS
A new strain, Fusarium verticillioides AUMC 15934 was chosen and identified for a violet pigment production process. Out of four different media studied, the tested strain grew well on potato dextrose broth medium. Optimum conditions are initial medium pH 8, 25 °C-incubation temperature, and for 15-day incubation period under shaking state. Moreover, a 400 Gy irradiation dose enhanced the pigment production. Chitosan microsphere loaded by the pigment was successfully prepared and characterized by infrared spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
This irradiated Fusarium strain provides a more economically favorable source for production of a natural violet dye with an optimum productivity, enhanced yield, and improved properties (such as, enhanced stability, controlled release, and bioaccessibility) by encapsulation with chitosan for efficient application in food industry.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39472859
doi: 10.1186/s12896-024-00909-7
pii: 10.1186/s12896-024-00909-7
doi:

Substances chimiques

Pigments, Biological 0
Chitosan 9012-76-4
Culture Media 0

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

84

Informations de copyright

© 2024. The Author(s).

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Auteurs

Mai Ali Mwaheb (MA)

Botany Department, Faculty of Science, Fayoum University, Fayoum, 63514, Egypt.

Yasmeen A Hasanien (YA)

Plant Research Department, Nuclear Research Center, Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority, Cairo, Egypt. Yasmeen21485@gmail.com.

Amira G Zaki (AG)

Plant Research Department, Nuclear Research Center, Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority, Cairo, Egypt. amira_hegab39@yahoo.com.

Alaa S Abdel-Razek (AS)

Radiation Protection and Safety Department, Hot Labs Center, Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority, Cairo, Egypt.

Laila R Abd Al Halim (LRA)

Agricultural Microbiology Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Fayoum University, Fayoum, 63514, Egypt.

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Classifications MeSH