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XTT assay for detection of bacterial metabolic activity in water-based polyester polyurethane

Preprints.org 2024 7 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Nallely Magaña-Montiel, Luis Felipe Muriel‐Millán, Liliana Pardo-López

Summary

Researchers developed a microplate-based colorimetric assay using the XTT tetrazolium salt to detect bacterial metabolic activity on polyester polyurethane plastic, providing a high-throughput screening method for identifying plastic-degrading microorganisms that can be adapted to other synthetic polymer substrates.

Polymers

Cellular metabolic activity can be detected by tetrazolium-based colorimetric assays, which rely on dehydrogenase enzymes from living cells to reduce tetrazolium compounds into colored formazan products. Although these methods have been used in different fields of microbiology, their application to the detection of bacteria with plastic-degrading activity has not been well documented. Here, we report a microplate-adapted method for the detection of bacteria metabolically active on the commercial polyester polyurethane (PU) Impranil®DLN using the tetrazolium salt 2,3-bis [2-methyloxy-4-nitro-5-sulfophenyl]-2H-tetrazolium-5-carboxanilide (XTT). Bacterial cells that are active on PU reduce XTT to a water-soluble orange dye, which can be quantitatively measured using a microplate reader. We used the Pseudomonas putida KT2440 strain as a study model. Its metabolic activity on Impranil detected by our novel method was further verified by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analyses. Measurements of the absorbance of reduced XTT at 470 nm in microplate wells were not affected by the colloidal properties of Impranil or cell density. In summary, we provide here an easy and high-throughput method for screening bacteria active on PU that can be adapted to other plastic substrates.

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