Microalgae cultures are receiving attention because of increasing biotechnological and biomedical production of active biomolecules. We evaluated various fertilizer-based culture media to scale up production of the marine microalga Phaeodactylum tricornutum for production of exocellular polysaccharides (EPS), soluble proteins, and cellular superoxide dismutase (SOD). The standard source of sodium nitrate was the same as that used in the synthetic f/2 culture medium and ammonium nitrate, urea, ammonium sulfate, and calcium nitrate as alternative sources of nitrogen. The maximum production of EPS was achieved in microalgae cells grown in the culture media containing 63 and 23% nitrogen from ammonium sulfate, and also in microalgae cells grown in the culture media containing 3% nitrogen from ammonium nitrate. The maximum production of cellular SOD was achieved in microalgae cells grown in the culture media containing 35 and 26% nitrogen from ammonium sulfate, and in the culture media containing 17% nitrogen from urea. The results suggest that it is possible to use a source of nitrogen, other than sodium nitrate, to scale up growth of P. tricornutum for production of EPS and SOD at reduced costs.
Helicobacter pylori is a common gastrointestinal pathogenic bacterium in humans and the usual preference for the stomach's outer membrane proteins (OMPs) are antigens involved in the adhesion process. Through SDS-PAGE and blotting analyses, using horseradish peroxidase-labeled heparan sulfate (HRP-HS) as a probe, we identified H. pylori OMPs with affinity for heparan sulfate (OMP-HS). Biotin-streptavidin bacterial-adhesion assay was used to evaluate participation of OMP-HS in the adhesion of H. pylori to semi-confluent HeLa S3 and Kato III cell monolayers. The results provide evidence that induction of antibodies against 2 OMP-HSs (HSBP-47 and HSBP-51) could reduce binding of H. pylori to both cell lines and induce detachment of cell-bound bacteria from infected cultured cells.
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