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result(s) for
"pH control"
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A Curcumin‐Modified Coordination Polymers with ROS Scavenging and Macrophage Phenotype Regulating Properties for Efficient Ulcerative Colitis Treatment
2023
Overexpression of classically activated macrophages (M1) subtypes and assessed reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels are often observed in patients with ulcerative colitis. At present, the treatment system of these two problems has yet to be established. Here, the chemotherapy drug curcumin (CCM) is decorated with Prussian blue analogs in a straightforward and cost‐saving manner. Modified CCM can be released in inflammatory tissue (acidic environment), eventually causing M1 macrophages to transform into M2 macrophages and inhibiting pro‐inflammatory factors. Co(III) and Fe(II) have abundant valence variations, and the lower REDOX potential in CCM‐CoFe PBA enables ROS clearance through multi‐nanomase activity. In addition, CCM‐CoFe PBA effectively alleviated the symptoms of UC mice induced by DSS and inhibited the progression of the disease. Therefore, the present material may be used as a new therapeutic agent for UC. The chemotherapy drug curcumin (CCM) is decorated with a Prussian blue analog. The modified CCM can be released in the inflammatory tissue (acidic environment), eventually transforming M1 macrophages into M2 macrophages and inhibiting pro‐inflammatory factors. Co(III) and Fe(II) have abundant valence variations, and the low REDOX potential of CCM‐CoFe PBA can remove ROS through multi‐nanomase activity.
Journal Article
Reconstruction of the glutamate decarboxylase system in Lactococcus lactis for biosynthesis of food-grade γ-aminobutyric acid
2021
Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), an important bioactive compound, is synthesized through the decarboxylation of L-glutamate (L-Glu) by glutamate decarboxylase (GAD). The use of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) as catalysts opens interesting avenues for the biosynthesis of food-grade GABA. However, a key obstacle involved in the improvement of GABA production is how to resolve the discrepancy of optimal pH between the intracellular GAD activity and cell growth. In this work, a potential GAD candidate (LpGadB) from Lactobacillus plantarum was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. Recombinant LpGadB existed as a homodimer under the native conditions with a molecular mass of 109.6 kDa and exhibited maximal activity at 40°C and pH 5.0. The Km value and catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of LpGadB for L-Glu was 21.33 mM and 1.19 mM−1s−1, respectively, with the specific activity of 26.67 μM/min/mg protein. Subsequently, four C-terminally truncated LpGadB mutants (GadBΔC10, GadBΔC11, GadBΔC12, GadBΔC13) were constructed based on homology modeling. Among them, the mutant GadBΔC11 with highest catalytic activity at near-neutral pH values was selected. In further, the GadBΔC11 and Glu/GABA antiporter (GadC) of Lactococcus lactis were co-overexpressed in the host L. lactis NZ3900. Finally, after 48 h of batch fermentation, the engineered strain L. lactis NZ3900/pNZ8149-gadBΔC11C yielded GABA concentration up to 33.52 g/L by applying a two-stage pH control strategy. Remarkably, this is the highest yield obtained to date for GABA from fermentation with L. lactis as a microbial cell factory.Key points• The GadB from L. plantarum was heterologously expressed in E. coli and biochemically characterized.• Deletion of the C-plug in GadB shifted its pH-dependent activity toward a higher pH.• Reconstructing the GAD system of L. lactis is an effective approach for improving its GABA production.
Journal Article
Identification and a phased pH control strategy of diosgenin bio-synthesized by an endogenous Bacillus licheniformis Syt1 derived from Dioscorea zingiberensis C. H. Wright
2021
Diosgenin is widely used as one precursor of steroidal drugs in pharmaceutical industry. Currently, there is no choice but to traditionally extract diosgenin from Dioscorea zingiberensis C. H. Wright (DZW) or other plants. In this work, an environmentally friendly approach, in which diosgenin can be bio-synthesized by the endophytic bacterium Bacillus licheniformis Syt1 isolated from DZW, is proposed. Diosgenin produced by the strain was identified by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA) showed that the melting point of the diosgenin product was 204 °C. The optical rotation measurement exhibited that the optical rotation was α20589 = − 126.1° ± 1.5° (chloroform, c = 1%): negative sign means that the product is left-handed, which is very important to further produce steroid hormone drugs. Cholesterol may be the intermediate product in the diosgenin biosynthesis pathway. In the batch fermentation process to produce diosgenin using the strain, pH values played an important role. A phased pH control strategy from 5.5 to 7.5 was proved to be more effective to improve production yield than any single pH control, which could get the highest diosgenin yield of 85 ± 8.6 mg L−1. The proposed method may replace phyto-chemistry extraction to produce diosgenin in the industry in the future.Key points• An endophytic Bacillus licheniformis Syt1 derived from host can produce diosgenin.• A dynamic pH industrial control strategy is better than any single pH control.• Proposed diosgenin-produced method hopefully replaces phyto-chemistry extraction.
Journal Article
Integrated Alkali Gradient pH Control Purification of Acidic Copper-Containing Etching Waste Solution and Cu2(OH)3Cl Conversion-Calcination Process for High-Purity CuO
2025
With the rapid advances of the electronics industry, a large amount of acidic etching waste solutions (AEWS) for etching Printed Circuit Board (PCB) are generated, which require complete remediation and sustainable recycling to avoid environmental pollution and wasting of resources. Herein, the novel purification technology for the acidic copper-containing etching waste solution was exploited via integrated alkali gradient pH control (3.0, 3.2, and 3.5). At pH 3.0, the system demonstrated selective metal removal with 94.02% efficiency for Fe and 82.60% for Mn. Elevating the pH to 3.2 enabled effective elimination of Zn (59.32%), Cr (59.46%), and Al (33.24%), while maintaining minimal copper loss (8.16%). Further pH adjustment to 3.5 achieved enhanced removal efficiencies of 97.86% (Fe), 91.30% (Mn), 59.38% (Zn), 62.10% (Cr), 21.66% (Ca), 34.05% (Al), and 26.66% (Co), with copper retention remaining high at 70.83% (29.17% loss). Furthermore, using the purified AEWS (pH 3.2) as precursor, high-purity nano-CuO was successfully synthesized through a Cu2(OH)3Cl conversion-calcination process, exhibiting 99.20% CuO purity with 0.0012% chlorine content and <0.1% metallic impurities. The development and application of the purification technology for AEWS containing copper, along with the production methodology for high-purity CuO, were significant to the fields of electronic information industry, environmental engineering, green industry and sustainable development of the ecological environment.
Journal Article
A Novel Two-stage pH Control Strategy for the Production of 5-Aminolevulinic Acid Using Recombinant Streptomyces coelicolor
2021
5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) has extensive use in photodynamic cancer therapy, tumor diagnosis, and agriculture. In the microbial production of ALA, most efforts have focused on engineering enzymes and the metabolic pathways involved in ALA biosynthesis. The aim of this study was to enhance ALA production using recombinant Streptomyces coelicolor expressing the ALA synthase gene (hem A) of Rhodobacter sphaeroides with a novel two-stage pH control strategy. Batch cultures were performed in production medium at different pH values. Although cells grew well at neutral pH (6.8–7.2), the highest amount of ALA was produced with a long culture time (140 h) at a weakly acidic pH (5.5–6.0). In response, a two-stage pH control strategy was developed in which pH was maintained at 6.8–7.2 for cell growth and then shifted to 5.5–6.0 to promote ALA synthesis, resulting in a significant enhancement in ALA production compared to a one-stage pH control strategy. The titer of ALA was further improved up to 482 mg/L in the two-stage pH culture by supplying more glucose in the medium and shifting the pH during the early phase of cultivation.
Journal Article
Macroalgal-Derived Alginate Soil Amendments for Water Retention, Nutrient Release Rate Reduction, and Soil pH Control
by
Pott, Robert William McClelland
,
van der Merwe, Roelof du Toit
,
Goosen, Neill Jurgens
in
Acidification
,
Acids
,
Agricultural wastes
2022
There is a need to develop sustainably sourced products that can address the needs for improved water retention in soils, slow the release rate of fertilizers (to prevent leaching and downstream eutrophication), and control soil pH for use in agriculture. This article investigates the use of industrial kelp solid waste extracted alginate (IW) slurries to produce soil amendment beads, potentially improving soil water retention, acting as slow-release fertilizers (SRFs), and combined with limestone controls soil pH levels. Alginate extracted from the IW was determined to have a lower guluronic (G) to mannuronic (M) acid ratio than pure laboratory-grade (LG) alginate (0.36 vs. 0.53). Hydrogels produced from the IW alginate achieved significantly higher equilibrium swelling ratios (1 wt% IW = 1.80) than LG hydrogels with similar concentrations (1 wt% LG = 0.61). Hydrogel beads were impregnated with ammonium nitrate and potassium chloride to produce potential SRFs. The release rates of K+ and NO3− nutrients from the produced SRFs into deionised water were decreased by one order of magnitude compared to pure salts. The nutrient release rates of the IW-based SRFs were shown to be similar to SRFs produced from LG alginate. Hydrogel beads were impregnated with limestone, and it was determined that the alginate-based hydrogels could significantly decrease the nutrient release rate. Using industrial kelp solid waste extracted alginate slurries shows potential for soil amendments production. This report emphasises, for the first time, the use of a crude alginate product in soil amendment formation. Further, it demonstrates slower release rates and soil pH control.
Journal Article
Enhanced fed-batch production of pyrroloquinoline quinine in Methylobacillus sp. CCTCC M2016079 with a two-stage pH control strategy
by
Machaku, David
,
Huang, Lei
,
Cai, Jin
in
Bacillus
,
Batch Cell Culture Techniques - economics
,
Batch Cell Culture Techniques - methods
2017
The effects of pH control strategy and fermentative operation modes on the biosynthesis of pyrroloquinoline quinine (PQQ) were investigated systematically with
Methylobacillus
sp. CCTCC M2016079 in the present work. Firstly, the shake-flask cultivations and benchtop fermentations at various pH values ranging from 5.3 to 7.8 were studied. Following a kinetic analysis of specific cell growth rate (
μ
x
) and specific PQQ formation rate (
μ
p
), the discrepancy in optimal pH values between cell growth and PQQ biosynthesis was observed, which stimulated us to develop a novel two-stage pH control strategy. During this pH-shifted process, the pH in the broth was controlled at 6.8 to promote the cell growth for the first 48 h and then shifted to 5.8 to enhance the PQQ synthesis until the end of fermentation. By applying this pH-shifted control strategy, the maximum PQQ production was improved to 158.61 mg/L in the benchtop fermenter, about 44.9% higher than that under the most suitable constant pH fermentation. Further fed-batch study showed that PQQ production could be improved from 183.38 to 272.21 mg/L by feeding of methanol at the rate of 11.5 mL/h in this two-stage pH process. Meanwhile, the productivity was also increased from 2.02 to 2.84 mg/L/h. In order to support cell growth during the shifted pH stage, the combined feeding of methanol and yeast extract was carried out, which brought about the highest concentration (353.28 mg/L) and productivity (3.27 mg/L/h) of PQQ. This work has revealed the potential of our developed simple and economical strategy for the large-scale production of PQQ.
Journal Article
A fuzzy control method based on rule extraction for the zinc leaching process of zinc hydrometallurgy
2023
In the neutral leaching process of zinc hydrometallurgy, the pH value directly affects the leaching rate of zinc calcine. However, due to the complex mechanism of the leaching process and frequent fluctuation of working conditions, it is difficult to control the pH value by manual control. Therefore, this study proposes a fuzzy control method based on rule extraction under multiple working conditions, and analyzes the pH control performance. Firstly, the different operating states are classified according to process mechanisms and the Pearson method. Secondly, under the framework of the active learning algorithm, the approximate linear dependence (ALD) method is introduced to iteratively select samples with rule information in the original sample set for manual annotation. Then, the support vector machine (SVM) method is used to extract fuzzy control rules in different working conditions. Finally, a fuzzy rule set is established according to the samples mapped by the support vector. The simulation results based on industrial data show that the proposed method has better control performance than conventional fuzzy control and proportional–integral–derivative (PID) control
Trade Publication Article
Adaptive evolutionary strategy coupled with an optimized biosynthesis process for the efficient production of pyrroloquinoline quinone from methanol
by
Ren, Yang
,
Yang, Xinwei
,
Ding, Lingtao
in
Adaptive laboratory evolution (ALE)
,
Aging
,
ambient temperature
2023
Background
Pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ), a cofactor for bacterial dehydrogenases, is associated with biological processes such as mitochondriogenesis, reproduction, growth, and aging. Due to the extremely high cost of chemical synthesis and low yield of microbial synthesis, the election of effective strains and the development of dynamic fermentation strategies for enhancing PQQ production are meaningful movements to meet the large-scale industrial requirements.
Results
A high-titer PQQ-producing mutant strain,
Hyphomicrobium denitrificans
FJNU-A26, was obtained by integrating ARTP (atmospheric and room‑temperature plasma) mutagenesis, adaptive laboratory evolution and high-throughput screening strategies. Afterward, the systematic optimization of the fermentation medium was conducted using a one-factor-at-a-time strategy and response surface methodology to increase the PQQ concentration from 1.02 to 1.37 g/L. The transcriptional analysis using qRT-PCR revealed that the expression of genes involved in PQQ biosynthesis were significantly upregulated when the ARTP-ALE-derived mutant was applied. Furthermore, a novel two-stage pH control strategy was introduced to address the inconsistent effects of the pH value on cell growth and PQQ production. These combined strategies led to a 148% increase in the PQQ concentration compared with that of the initial strain FJNU-6, reaching 1.52 g/L with a yield of 40.3 mg/g DCW after 144 h of fed-batch fermentation in a 5-L fermenter.
Conclusion
The characteristics above suggest that FJNU-A26 represents an effective candidate as an industrial PQQ producer, and the integrated strategies can be readily extended to other microorganisms for the large-scale production of PQQ.
Journal Article
Corrosion as the origin of limited lifetime of vanadium oxide-based aqueous zinc ion batteries
2022
Aqueous zinc ion batteries are receiving increasing attention for large-scale energy storage systems owing to their attractive features with respect to safety, cost, and scalability. Although vanadium oxides with various compositions have been demonstrated to store zinc ions reversibly, their limited cyclability especially at low current densities and their poor calendar life impede their widespread practical adoption. Herein, we reveal that the electrochemically inactive zinc pyrovanadate (ZVO) phase formed on the cathode surface is the main cause of the limited sustainability. Moreover, the formation of ZVO is closely related to the corrosion of the zinc metal counter electrode by perturbing the pH of the electrolyte. Thus, the dissolution of VO
2
(OH)
2
−
, the source of the vanadium in the ZVO, is no longer prevented. The proposed amalgamated Zn anode improves the cyclability drastically by blocking the corrosion at the anode, verifying the importance of pH control and the interplay between both electrodes.
Aqueous zinc ion batteries are good systems for large-scale energy storage. Here, the authors report that the corrosion of zinc metal anode is the origin of limited lifetime of vanadium oxide-based aqueous zinc ion batteries, and supressing corrosion improves the calendar and cycle lifetime markedly.
Journal Article