Gram-positive, endospore-forming Bacillus thuringiensis-like strains were isolated from 95 of 413 samples collected at the 0-5 cm depth of noncultivated soils and stagnant or dried-up ponds as well as from dust from stored grain products in South Central United States. Based on the production of parasporal crystals, 25 isolates were identified as B. thuringiensis after examining 227 B. thuringiensis-like colonies. The greatest proportion of samples yielding B. thuringiensis were from the dust from grain storage. The sodium acetate selective medium, heat processing, and crystal staining used in the initial screening revealed diverse populations of B. thuringiensis, which were categorized into distinct crystal morphological groups. Sugar fermentation, antibiotic sensitivity, growth characteristics and PCR studies showed diversity among the isolates that were distributed among 25 of the 58 known strains. The most frequently isolated strains were kurstaki, aizawai, morrisoni, thuringiensis, sotto and kenyae that together represented more than 90% of the characterized isolates. PCR analysis using 30 family primer pairs for cry and cyt genes showed that the frequency of the cry1 gene (62%) was predominant followed by the cry2 genes (30%), and the rest (8%) were other cry gene types, such as cry3, cry4, cry10, cry11, cry14, cry15, cry20, cry24 and cry26. Both cyt1 and -2 genes were also detected. Several isolates showed PCR products on the gel that were not consistent with the expected sizes of nucleotides targeted by the primers. These were suggestive of nonspecific amplifications and were not used in the characterization process.
Gram-positive, endospore-forming Bacillus thuringiensis-like strains were isolated from 95 of 413 samples collected at the 0-5 cm depth of noncultivated soils and stagnant or dried-up ponds as well as from dust from stored grain products in South Central United States. Based on the production of parasporal crystals, 25 isolates were identified as B. thuringiensis after examining 227 B. thuringiensis-like colonies. The greatest proportion of samples yielding B. thuringiensis were from the dust from grain storage. The sodium acetate selective medium, heat processing, and crystal staining used in the initial screening revealed diverse populations of B. thuringiensis, which were categorized into distinct crystal morphological groups. Sugar fermentation, antibiotic sensitivity, growth characteristics and PCR studies showed diversity among the isolates that were distributed among 25 of the 58 known strains. The most frequently isolated strains were kurstaki, aizawai, morrisoni, thuringiensis, sotto and kenyae that together represented more than 90% of the characterized isolates. PCR analysis using 30 family primer pairs for cry and cyt genes showed that the frequency of the cry1 gene (62%) was predominant followed by the cry2 genes (30%), and the rest (8%) were other cry gene types, such as cry3, cry4, cry10, cry11, cry14, cry15, cry20, cry24 and cry26. Both cyt1 and -2 genes were also detected. Several isolates showed PCR products on the gel that were not consistent with the expected sizes of nucleotides targeted by the primers. These were suggestive of nonspecific amplifications and were not used in the characterization process.
Microbial secondary metabolites have emerged as alternative novel drugs for the treatment of human cancers. Violacein, a purple pigment produced by Chromobacterium violaceum, was investigated in the present study for its anti-tumor properties in tumor cell lines. Clinically applicable concentrations of violacein were demonstrated to inhibit the proliferative capacity of tumor cell lines according to a crystal violet proliferation assay. The underlying mechanism was the promotion of apoptotic cell death, as indicated by poly(ADP ribose) polymerase cleavage and p44/42 mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling determined by western blot analysis. Collectively, this provided mechanistic evidence that violacein elicits extracellular-signal regulated kinase-induced apoptosis via the intrinsic pathway. The anti-malignant properties of violacein in the present study were further demonstrated by its inhibitory effects on brain tumor cell migration, specifically glioblastomas, one of the most invasive and therapeutically resistant neoplasms in the clinic. Additionally, solid tumors examined in the present study displayed differential cellular responses and sensitivities to violacein as observed by morphologically induced cellular changes that contributed to its anti-migratory properties. In conclusion, violacein is a novel natural product with the potential to kill several types of human tumor cell lines, as well as prevent disease recurrence by antagonizing cellular processes that contribute to metastatic invasion.
The principles and problems of environmental pollution and contamination are outlined. Emphasis is given to case examples from developing countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America with a comparative analysis to developed countries. The problems of pollution/contamination are widespread in developed countries but are gradually spreading from the urban to rural areas in the developing countries. Great efforts in research and control programs to check pollution-loading into the environment have been made in the industrialized countries, but only negligible actions have been taken in developing countries. Pollutants emanate from both point and distributed sources and have adversely affected both surface water and groundwaters. The influences of the geologic and hydrologic cycles that exacerbate the incidences of pollution/contamination have not been well understood by environmental planners and managers. Professionals in the different areas of pollution control projects, particularly in developing countries, lack the integrated multiobjective approaches and techniques in problem solving. Such countries as Nigeria, Kenya, Brazil, and India are now menaced by pollution hazards. Appropriate methods of control are hereby suggested.
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