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      Antioxidant Activity of Aspergillus fumigatus

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      * ,
      ISRN Pharmacology
      International Scholarly Research Network

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          Abstract

          The antioxidant activity of Aspergillus fumigatus was assayed by different procedures and correlated with its extracellular total phenolic contents. Different physio-chemical parameters were optimized to enhance the activity. The culture grown under stationary conditions for 10 days at 25°C at pH 7 gave the best antioxidant activity. Statistical approaches demonstrated sucrose and NaNO 3 to be the most suitable carbon and nitrogen sources, respectively. Response surface analysis showed 5% sucrose, 0.05% NaNO 3, and incubation temperature of 35°C to be the optimal conditions for best expression of antioxidant activity. Under these conditions, the antioxidant potential assayed through different procedures was 89.8%, 70.1%, and 70.2% scavenging effect for DPPH radical, ferrous ion and nitric oxide ion, respectively. The reducing power showed an absorbance of 1.0 and FRAP assay revealed the activity of 60.5%. Extracellular total phenolic content and antioxidant activity as assayed by different procedures positively correlated.

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          Most cited references40

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          Revised methods for the Salmonella mutagenicity test.

          The methods for detecting carcinogens and mutagens with the Salmonella mutagenicity test were described previously (Ames et al., 1975b). The present paper is a revision of the methods. Two new tester strains, a frameshift strain (TA97) and a strain carrying an ochre mutation on a multicopy plasmid (TA102), are added to the standard tester set. TA97 replaces TA1537. TA1535 and TA1538 are removed from the recommended set but can be retained at the option of the investigator. TA98 and TA100 are retained. We discuss other special purpose strains and present some minor changes in procedure, principally in the growth, storage, and preservation of the tester strains. Two substitutions are made in diagnostic mutagens to eliminate MNNG and 9-aminoacridine. Some test modifications are discussed.
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            In vitro evaluation of cell/biomaterial interaction by MTT assay.

            The tetrazolium-based colorimetric assay (MTT test) measures only in vitro living cells and the results are directly related to the number of viable cultured cells. It has been adopted in immunological investigations, cancer research and, recently, biocompatibility evaluation. We used the MTT method with minor modifications to fit it to an in vitro study of biomaterial-cell interactions. The MTT assay was confirmed to be feasible, rapid and reproducible. Moreover, it showed a good correlation with other in vitro proliferation assays, such as the 3H-thymidine uptake assay. By using the MTT method and the ASTM procedure for extracting biomaterials, we quantified the in vitro cell compatibility of different metals and polymers.
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              Chemical composition, antioxidant and antibacterial activities of the essential oils isolated from Tunisian Thymus capitatus Hoff. et Link.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ISRN Pharmacol
                PHARMACOLOGY
                ISRN Pharmacology
                International Scholarly Research Network
                2090-5165
                2090-5173
                2011
                11 April 2011
                : 2011
                : 619395
                Affiliations
                Microbial Technology Laboratory, Department of Microbiology, Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar 143005, India
                Author notes
                *Daljit Singh Arora: daljit_02@ 123456yahoo.co.in

                Academic Editors: H. Cerecetto and M. L. Ferrandiz

                Article
                10.5402/2011/619395
                3198597
                22084718
                6730fe7f-0f83-4906-a5ec-beee9bc38b2e
                Copyright © 2011 D. S. Arora and P. Chandra.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 14 January 2011
                : 21 February 2011
                Categories
                Research Article

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine

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