2.Purification and physicochemical characterisation of Aspergillus niger USM F4 β-mannanase
Ab Rashid Syarifah ; Ibrahim Darah ; Che Omar Ibrahim ; Hassan Ramli ; Woei Yenn Tong
Malaysian Journal of Microbiology 2020;16(5):396-406
Aims:
This present study focused on purification of fungal β-mannanase produced by Aspergillus niger USM F4 and
also physicochemical characterisation of the purified enzyme.
Methodology and results:
The purified β-mannanase with a molecular mass of ~47.4 kDa was demonstrated on SDSPAGE gel. The enzyme signified a purification degree of 4-fold, with final specific activity of 196.42 U/mg. It reached an
optimum catalytic activity at pH 4.0 and 60 °C. The thermal stability of the enzyme was up to 70 °C and maintained the
50% activity after 30 min at 80 °C. Meanwhile, the pH stability was in the range of pH 3.0-9.0 and a 30 min half-life at pH
10.0. All chemical substances manifested an inhibitory effect on purified β-mannanase, with SDS (28.16 ± 0.05%
residual activity) as the strongest inhibitor, followed by cupric ion (Cu2+) (49.51 ± 0.09% residual activity). As a whole, the
enzyme displayed a substrate specificity in the order of locust bean gum (LBG) > carboxymethylcellulose > soluble
starch > xylan from oat spelt > α-cellulose. Its preference for LBG has generated the Km and Vmax values of 0.20 mg/mL
and 9.82 U/mL, respectively.
Conclusion, significance and impact of study
The outcomes of our study offer potential for use at industrial scales,
particularly in the oligosaccharides production that involve acid-related activity, wide-ranging temperature and pH
stability.
Aspergillus niger
;
beta-Mannosidase
3.Are Dropped Bone Grafts Safe to be Re-used? - An Experimental Study Comparing Efficacy of Chlorhexidine, Povidone-Iodine and Alcohol
Mat-Salleh MF ; Sadagatullah AN ; Ibrahim MY ; Abdul-Aziz I ; Wan-Abdullah WA ; Maning N ; Md-Hassan MN ; Ab-Rashid MR
Malaysian Orthopaedic Journal 2021;15(No.2):70-76
Introduction: A dilemma arises when a bone graft or
fracture fragment is accidentally dropped on the operation
theatre floor and becomes contaminated. This study aimed to
determine the efficacy of simple and readily available
antiseptic solutions in disinfecting contaminated bones.
Materials and methods: This experimental study involved
225 bone specimens prepared from discarded bone
fragments during a series of 45 knee and hip arthroplasty
surgeries. The bone fragments were cut into five identical
cubes and were randomly assigned to either control (positive
or negative), or experimental groups (0.5% chlorhexidine,
10% povidone-iodine or 70% alcohol). The control negative
was to determine pre-contamination culture. All bone
specimens, except the control negative group were uniformly
contaminated by dropping on the operation theatre floor.
Subsequently, the dropped bone specimens except for the
control positive group, were disinfected by immersing in a
respective antiseptic solution for 10 minutes, before
transported to the microbiology laboratory for incubation.
Results: The incidence of a positive culture from a dropped
bone fragment was 86.5%. From the 37 specimens sent for
each group, the incidence of positive culture was 5.4% (2
specimens) after being disinfected using chlorhexidine,
67.6% (25 specimens) using povidone-iodine and 81.1% (30
specimens) using alcohol. Simple logistic regression analysis
demonstrated that chlorhexidine was significantly effective
in disinfecting contaminated bones (p-value <0.001, odd
ratio 0.009). Povidone-iodine and alcohol were not
statistically significant (p-value 0.059 and 0.53,
respectively). Organisms identified were Bacillus species
and coagulase negative Staphylococcus. No gram-negative
bacteria were isolated.
Conclusion: A total of 0.5% chlorhexidine is effective and
superior in disinfecting contaminated bones.