2 resultados para METABOLIC-REGULATION
em University of Cagliari UniCA Eprints
Resumo:
Nitrogen is the most abundant element in atmosphere and fundamental component of proteins, nucleic acids and other essential molecules. In the past century the industrial use of nitrogen compounds has grown exponentially causing widespread pollution. Nitrogen pollution has wide-ranging impacts including contributions to global warming, acid rains and eutrophication. Reduction of nitrogen use in industry and agriculture coupled whit remediation treatments could represent a solution. To this purpose we isolated from environmental samples a nitrophile strain capable of removing nitrogen compounds efficiently from the medium. Through the molecular characterization, we identified the strain as a Rhodotorula glutinis that we called DSBCA06. We examined the main metabolic features of the strain, also to determine the best growing conditions. At the same time, the ability of the strain to grow in presence of high nitrite concentrations was assayed, being a relevant feature poorly studied earlierfor other environmental yeasts. The ability of the strain to grow in presence of heavy metal cations was also tested, showing a noticeable tolerance. The cost of bioremediation treatments is often a problem. One of the way to obviate this is to produce valuable secondary metabolites, capable of positively impact the cost of the processes. In this context the ability of the strain to produce carotenoids, natural molecules with antioxidant properties used for food production, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industry, has been evaluated. The strain Rhodotorula glutinis DSBCA06 showed interesting features suggesting its possible use in bioremediation or industrials process for production of secondary metabolites such as lipids and carotenoids.
Resumo:
Nowadays, classical (bio)remediation processes are affected by some economical and environmental drawbacks. These approaches often seem to be inadequate, particularly in the perspective of sustainable green processes. Since immobilized metalloporphines can emulate the active site of peroxidases and peroxygenases, their use in several bioremediation processes has been analyzed in this work. The described catalytic reactions use bioinspired, homogenized or heterogenized, commercial porphines and showed a remarkable ability to catalyze substrates oxidation at the expenses of different oxidants such as Oxone and hydrogen peroxide. The biomimetic catalysts have been also investigated about their peroxidase- and peroxygenase-like catalysis and ability to emulate lignolytic peroxidases action and substrate specificity. The adducts showed a remarkable ability to catalyze veratryl alcohol (widely recognized as a simple model compound of lignin) oxidation at the expenses of H2O2. In the perspective of broadening industrial applications of the described catalysts, the oxidation of several pollutants such as durable textile dyes and inorganic sulfides, has been attempted with quite promising results, and some findings open the way toward industrial scaling-up. Accordingly, the inexpensiveness of the synthesis and the mild operational conditions allow these adducts to be proposed as applicable catalysts also for industrial large-scale processes. Besides, these synthetic models are helpful also to understand the behavior of pharmaceuticals, antifungal drugs in this case, in the environment, and to predict the drug metabolism by cytochromes P450. The biomimetic catalysts, for the studied cases, also proved to be much more efficient than the corresponding enzymes.