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Journal ArticleDOI

The Reduction of Azo Dyes by the Intestinal Microflora

TLDR
The azoreductase activity in a variety of intestinal preparations was affected by various dietary factors such as cellulose, proteins, fibers, antibiotics, or supplementation with live cultures of lactobacilli.
Abstract
Azo dyes are widely used in the textile, printing, paper manufacturing, pharmaceutical, and food industries and also in research laboratories When these compounds either inadvertently or by design enter the body through ingestion, they are metabolized to aromatic amines by intestinal microorganisms Reductive enzymes in the liver can also catalyze the reductive cleavage of the azo linkage to produce aromatic amines However, evidence indicates that the intestinal microbial azoreductase may be more important than the liver enzymes in azo reduction In this article, we examine the significance of the capacity of intestinal bacteria to reduce azo dyes and the conditions of azo reduction Many azo dyes, such as Acid Yellow, Amaranth, Azodisalicylate, Chicago Sky Blue, Congo Red, Direct Black 38, Direct Blue 6, Direct Blue 15, Direct Brown 95, Fast Yellow, Lithol Red, Methyl Orange, Methyl Red, Methyl Yellow, Naphthalene Fast Orange 2G, Neoprontosil, New Coccine, Orange II, Phenylazo-2-naphthol, Ponceau 3R, Ponceau SX, Red 2G, Red 10B, Salicylazosulphapyridine, Sunset Yellow, Tartrazine, and Trypan Blue, are included in this article A wide variety of anaerobic bacteria isolated from caecal or fecal contents from experimental animals and humans have the ability to cleave the azo linkage(s) to produce aromatic amines Azoreductase(s) catalyze these reactions and have been found to be oxygen sensitive and to require flavins for optimal activity The azoreductase activity in a variety of intestinal preparations was affected by various dietary factors such as cellulose, proteins, fibers, antibiotics, or supplementation with live cultures of lactobacilli

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Review paper on current technologies for decolourisation of textile wastewaters: Perspectives for anaerobic biotechnology

TL;DR: This paper provides a critical review on the current technologies available for decolourisation of textile wastewaters and it suggests effective and economically attractive alternatives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Basic and applied aspects in the microbial degradation of azo dyes

TL;DR: Several (laboratory-scale) continuous anaerobic/aerobic processes for the treatment of wastewaters containing azo dyes have recently been described.
Journal ArticleDOI

White-rot fungi and their enzymes for the treatment of industrial dye effluents.

TL;DR: The decolorization and detoxification potential of WRF can be harnessed thanks to emerging knowledge of the physiology of these organisms as well as of the biocatalysis and stability characteristics of their enzymes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment and Reuse of Wastewater from the Textile Wet-Processing Industry : Review of Emerging Technologies

TL;DR: The main limitation of this approach is the treatment of the concentrate stream as discussed by the authors, which is a segment of the research dealing with the separate handling of speci-c sub-streams such as dyebath effluents to which membrane -ltration is sometimes applied.
Book ChapterDOI

Bacterial Decolorization and Degradation of Azo Dyes

TL;DR: The first synthetic dye compound was aniline purple as mentioned in this paper, which was synthesized in 1856 and was the first compound to be synthesized from natural colorants, and it was used extensively in textile, leather tanning, paper production, food technology, agriculture, light harvesting array, coloring and pharmaceuticals.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mutagenicity of azo dyes: structure-activity relationships.

TL;DR: The chemical structure of many mutagenic azo dyes was reviewed, and it was found that the biologically active dyes are mainly limited to those compounds containing p-phenylenediamine and benzidine moieties.
Journal Article

The role of intestinal bacteria in the metabolism of salicylazosulfapyridine

TL;DR: Findings indicate that tile intestinal bacteria are responsible for the initial reaction in SAS transformation and raise questions concerning the amount of intact SAS that reaches the presumed site of its action in inflammatory disease of the lower intestine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disposition of quercetin in man after single oral and intravenous doses.

TL;DR: The data obtained show that oral administration of flavonoids may be of questionable value, and no measurable plasma concentrations could be detected, nor was any quercetin found in urine, either unchanged or in a metabolized form after oral administration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Azoreductase activity of anaerobic bacteria isolated from human intestinal microflora.

TL;DR: A plate assay was developed for the detection of anaerobic bacteria that produce azoreductases that are capable of reducing azo dyes and showed that each bacterium expressed only one azOREductase isozyme.
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