One of the most critical challenges for the food packaging industry to overcome is the development of biodegradable coatings from renewable sources. In this work, purple yam starch (PYS), chitosan (CS), and glycerol were blended to obtain biodegradable films for characterization as intended food coatings. The films had a homogeneous surface, and the amount of CS highly influenced the film thickness. Infrared spectroscopy indicated hydrogen bond interactions between PYS and CS in the films. Thermogram data suggested that glycerol contributed to the thermal stability of the films, due to its greater interaction with CS than to the PYS. Finally, the application of a YS/CS film on apples for 4 weeks was able to preserve the fruit quality, as weight loss from the coated apple was significantly lower than the uncoated apple (p = 0.44, Dunnet's posthoc test). YS/CS films have great prospects in the food packaging industry as a new biodegradable coating. © 2020 The Authors.Purpose Bile acids play an important role in Clostridioides difficile life cycle. Deoxycholate (DCA), one of the most abundant secondary bile acids, is known to inhibit vegetative growth and toxin production. However, limited data are available on the role of DCA on C. difficile sporulation. Here, we investigated the phenotypic and genotypic impact of DCA on the growth, toxin production, and sporulation of C. difficile. Methodology Four genetically divergent C. difficile strains were cultured in nutrient-rich broth with and without DCA at various concentrations, and growth activity was evaluated for each strain. Cytotoxicity assays using culture supernatants from cells grown in nutrient-rich broth with and without 0.01% DCA were conducted. Sporulation efficiency was determined using sporulation media with and without 0.01% DCA. Transcript levels of tcdB and spo0A were analyzed using quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Results We found that DCA led to growth reduction in a dose-depended manner and regulated toxin production by repressing tcdB expression during vegetative growth. To our knowledge, we have also provided the first evidence that DCA reduces C. difficile sporulation efficiency through the downregulation of spo0A expression during the sporulation stage. Conclusions DCA modulates C. difficile sporulation, vegetative growth, and toxin production. © 2020 The Author(s).Carvacrol (Carv) and thymol (TOH), components of essential oils, are known by their antimicrobial and antioxidant activity. However, Carv but not TOH seems to be the responsible of anti-inflammatory and inhibition of Cu corrosion properties. Since Carv and TOH are positional isomers, their identification is tricky and GC-MS is usually required. To find simple and inexpensive methods that allow the detection of Carv in presence of TOH (e.g. essential oils), cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry tests using Pt and Cu as electrodes in TOH and Carv containing mixtures and essential oils were made. Electrochemical and ATR-FTIR results show that pure phytocompounds and mixtures lead to the formation of polymeric layers on both metallic surfaces. Results show that only Cu is suitable for Carv detection. Potentiostatic and potentiodynamic detection is simple and conclusive in Carv + TOH mixtures and in essential oils due to the formation of a homogeneous blocking Carv electropolymeric layer on Cu. © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.Agricultural drainage ditches represent a major source of nutrient pollution. Shifts in nitrogen source and use of animal manures have changed the bacterial composition both in species of bacteria and their abundance in agricultural ditches. This change affects how nitrogen is being cycled and potentially the final forms of available nutrients. In particular, animal manures often have bacteria such as Escherichia coli present, increasing the abundance of a bacterial species in ditches. Research has shown that the effect of different nitrogen sources is to change bacterial community composition (class, family). How this influences the role of an individual bacterial species is poorly understood. Thus, our question was how individual species would respond to different sources of nitrogen. We used Aeromonas hydrophila, Bacillus thuringiensis, Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa that are common in agricultural ditches and exposed them to different concentrations of nitrogen in cultures of 1 × 100 and 1 × 10-1 dilutions from a stock solution of bacteria. Nitrogen sources were ammonium chloride, sodium nitrate and urea. The results showed A. hydrophila and E. coli have strong similarities particularly with nitrate-N and urea-N utilization and the response was often correlated with the amount of nutrient added. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/dmb.html P. aeruginosa while similar did not show any strong correlation with amount of nutrient added. B. thuringiensis was different from the other three bacteria in utilization or production. Research has provided insight into the role of some bacteria in nitrogen cycling and may be valuable in the future to developing management strategies to reduce nutrients.Ziziphus mucronata is an important multi-purpose plant species that has been used in African traditional medicine for ages in the treatment of various devastating human and animal infections. The current paper is aimed at providing an overview of uses, toxicology, pharmacological properties and phytochemistry of Z. mucronata. The information used in the current work was retrieved using various search engines, including Pubmed, Science Direct, Google Scholar, Scielo, SciFinder and Scopus. The key words used included Ziziphus mucronata, secondary metabolites, chemistry, biological activity and pharmacology, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antifungal, antiviral, ethnobotanical survey, medicinal uses, safety, toxicology and other related words. Out of the 46 infections which the plant species is used to treat, the most common uses includes sexually transmitted infections, skin infections, diarrhoea and dysentery, respiratory and chest complaints and gynaecological complaints (citations ≥6). Pharmacologically, the plant species exhibited a potential antimicrobial activity yielding a minimum inhibitory concentration of less then 1 mg/ml against important pathogens which includes Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Moraxella catarrhalis, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Propionibacterium acnes, Candida albicans, Cryptoccoos neoformans amongst other microorganisms.
One of the most critical challenges for the food packaging industry to overcome is the development of biodegradable coatings from renewable sources. In this work, purple yam starch (PYS), chitosan (CS), and glycerol were blended to obtain biodegradable films for characterization as intended food coatings. The films had a homogeneous surface, and the amount of CS highly influenced the film thickness. Infrared spectroscopy indicated hydrogen bond interactions between PYS and CS in the films. Thermogram data suggested that glycerol contributed to the thermal stability of the films, due to its greater interaction with CS than to the PYS. Finally, the application of a YS/CS film on apples for 4 weeks was able to preserve the fruit quality, as weight loss from the coated apple was significantly lower than the uncoated apple (p = 0.44, Dunnet's posthoc test). YS/CS films have great prospects in the food packaging industry as a new biodegradable coating. © 2020 The Authors.Purpose Bile acids play an important role in Clostridioides difficile life cycle. Deoxycholate (DCA), one of the most abundant secondary bile acids, is known to inhibit vegetative growth and toxin production. However, limited data are available on the role of DCA on C. difficile sporulation. Here, we investigated the phenotypic and genotypic impact of DCA on the growth, toxin production, and sporulation of C. difficile. Methodology Four genetically divergent C. difficile strains were cultured in nutrient-rich broth with and without DCA at various concentrations, and growth activity was evaluated for each strain. Cytotoxicity assays using culture supernatants from cells grown in nutrient-rich broth with and without 0.01% DCA were conducted. Sporulation efficiency was determined using sporulation media with and without 0.01% DCA. Transcript levels of tcdB and spo0A were analyzed using quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Results We found that DCA led to growth reduction in a dose-depended manner and regulated toxin production by repressing tcdB expression during vegetative growth. To our knowledge, we have also provided the first evidence that DCA reduces C. difficile sporulation efficiency through the downregulation of spo0A expression during the sporulation stage. Conclusions DCA modulates C. difficile sporulation, vegetative growth, and toxin production. © 2020 The Author(s).Carvacrol (Carv) and thymol (TOH), components of essential oils, are known by their antimicrobial and antioxidant activity. However, Carv but not TOH seems to be the responsible of anti-inflammatory and inhibition of Cu corrosion properties. Since Carv and TOH are positional isomers, their identification is tricky and GC-MS is usually required. To find simple and inexpensive methods that allow the detection of Carv in presence of TOH (e.g. essential oils), cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry tests using Pt and Cu as electrodes in TOH and Carv containing mixtures and essential oils were made. Electrochemical and ATR-FTIR results show that pure phytocompounds and mixtures lead to the formation of polymeric layers on both metallic surfaces. Results show that only Cu is suitable for Carv detection. Potentiostatic and potentiodynamic detection is simple and conclusive in Carv + TOH mixtures and in essential oils due to the formation of a homogeneous blocking Carv electropolymeric layer on Cu. © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.Agricultural drainage ditches represent a major source of nutrient pollution. Shifts in nitrogen source and use of animal manures have changed the bacterial composition both in species of bacteria and their abundance in agricultural ditches. This change affects how nitrogen is being cycled and potentially the final forms of available nutrients. In particular, animal manures often have bacteria such as Escherichia coli present, increasing the abundance of a bacterial species in ditches. Research has shown that the effect of different nitrogen sources is to change bacterial community composition (class, family). How this influences the role of an individual bacterial species is poorly understood. Thus, our question was how individual species would respond to different sources of nitrogen. We used Aeromonas hydrophila, Bacillus thuringiensis, Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa that are common in agricultural ditches and exposed them to different concentrations of nitrogen in cultures of 1 × 100 and 1 × 10-1 dilutions from a stock solution of bacteria. Nitrogen sources were ammonium chloride, sodium nitrate and urea. The results showed A. hydrophila and E. coli have strong similarities particularly with nitrate-N and urea-N utilization and the response was often correlated with the amount of nutrient added. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/dmb.html P. aeruginosa while similar did not show any strong correlation with amount of nutrient added. B. thuringiensis was different from the other three bacteria in utilization or production. Research has provided insight into the role of some bacteria in nitrogen cycling and may be valuable in the future to developing management strategies to reduce nutrients.Ziziphus mucronata is an important multi-purpose plant species that has been used in African traditional medicine for ages in the treatment of various devastating human and animal infections. The current paper is aimed at providing an overview of uses, toxicology, pharmacological properties and phytochemistry of Z. mucronata. The information used in the current work was retrieved using various search engines, including Pubmed, Science Direct, Google Scholar, Scielo, SciFinder and Scopus. The key words used included Ziziphus mucronata, secondary metabolites, chemistry, biological activity and pharmacology, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antifungal, antiviral, ethnobotanical survey, medicinal uses, safety, toxicology and other related words. Out of the 46 infections which the plant species is used to treat, the most common uses includes sexually transmitted infections, skin infections, diarrhoea and dysentery, respiratory and chest complaints and gynaecological complaints (citations ≥6). Pharmacologically, the plant species exhibited a potential antimicrobial activity yielding a minimum inhibitory concentration of less then 1 mg/ml against important pathogens which includes Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Moraxella catarrhalis, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Propionibacterium acnes, Candida albicans, Cryptoccoos neoformans amongst other microorganisms.
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