Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium
Abstract Cadmium is one of the most dreadful heavy metals and is becoming a major toxicant in ground water with increasing concentration above the WHO Guidelines in drinking water (0.003 mg/L). The potential sources of cadmium include sewage sludge, phosphate fertilizers and ingredients like Ni–Cd b...
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Nature Portfolio
2023-07-01
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Series: | Scientific Reports |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-38485-z |
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author | Kaustav Bhattacharyya Neelanjan Bhattacharjee Subhadeep Ganguly |
author_facet | Kaustav Bhattacharyya Neelanjan Bhattacharjee Subhadeep Ganguly |
author_sort | Kaustav Bhattacharyya |
collection | DOAJ |
description | Abstract Cadmium is one of the most dreadful heavy metals and is becoming a major toxicant in ground water with increasing concentration above the WHO Guidelines in drinking water (0.003 mg/L). The potential sources of cadmium include sewage sludge, phosphate fertilizers and ingredients like Ni–Cd batteries, pigments, plating and plastics. Cadmium levels are increased in water owing to the use and disposal of cadmium containing ingredients. Water draining from a landfill may contain higher cadmium levels. The authors have tried to evaluate the optimized nutritional conditions for the optimal growth and Cd(II) remediation capacity for a developed Cd(II) resistant yeast strain named Candida tropicalis XTA 1874 isolated from contaminated water-body in West Bengal. By analyzing the optimization conditions, a synthetic medium was developed and the composition has been given in the main text. The strain showed much better Cd(II) adsorption capacity under the optimized nutritional conditions (Mean removal = 88.077 ± 0.097%). |
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language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-12T21:10:30Z |
publishDate | 2023-07-01 |
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spelling | doaj.art-eca50aaa734c4a218bd9230768d55b582023-07-30T11:15:35ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222023-07-0113112910.1038/s41598-023-38485-zEvidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous mediumKaustav Bhattacharyya0Neelanjan Bhattacharjee1Subhadeep Ganguly2Department of Physiology, Vidyasagar CollegeDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, University of AlbertaDepartment of Physiology, Vidyasagar CollegeAbstract Cadmium is one of the most dreadful heavy metals and is becoming a major toxicant in ground water with increasing concentration above the WHO Guidelines in drinking water (0.003 mg/L). The potential sources of cadmium include sewage sludge, phosphate fertilizers and ingredients like Ni–Cd batteries, pigments, plating and plastics. Cadmium levels are increased in water owing to the use and disposal of cadmium containing ingredients. Water draining from a landfill may contain higher cadmium levels. The authors have tried to evaluate the optimized nutritional conditions for the optimal growth and Cd(II) remediation capacity for a developed Cd(II) resistant yeast strain named Candida tropicalis XTA 1874 isolated from contaminated water-body in West Bengal. By analyzing the optimization conditions, a synthetic medium was developed and the composition has been given in the main text. The strain showed much better Cd(II) adsorption capacity under the optimized nutritional conditions (Mean removal = 88.077 ± 0.097%).https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-38485-z |
spellingShingle | Kaustav Bhattacharyya Neelanjan Bhattacharjee Subhadeep Ganguly Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium Scientific Reports |
title | Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium |
title_full | Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium |
title_fullStr | Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium |
title_full_unstemmed | Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium |
title_short | Evidences for the augmented Cd(II) biosorption by Cd(II) resistant strain Candida tropicalis XTA1874 from contaminated aqueous medium |
title_sort | evidences for the augmented cd ii biosorption by cd ii resistant strain candida tropicalis xta1874 from contaminated aqueous medium |
url | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-38485-z |
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