Extraction, Characterization, and Antimicrobial Activity of Chitosan from Horse Mussel Modiolus modiolus
Author(s) -
Rahul Varma,
Sugumar Vasudevan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.0c01903
Subject(s) - chitosan , chitin , fourier transform infrared spectroscopy , mussel , nuclear chemistry , biopolymer , chemistry , antibacterial activity , extraction (chemistry) , polymer , chromatography , chemical engineering , biology , fishery , bacteria , biochemistry , organic chemistry , genetics , engineering
Chitin and chitosan have been proved to have enormous applications in biomedical, pharmaceutical, and industrial fields. The horse mussel, Modiolus modiolus , a refuse of the fishery industries at Thondi, is a reserve of rich chitin. The aim of this work is to extract chitosan from the horse mussel and its further characterization using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), micro-Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction (XRD), and elemental analysis. The result of FTIR studies revealed different functional groups of organic compounds such as out-of-plane bending (564 cm -1 ), C-O-C stretching (711 cm -1 ), and CH 2 stretching (1174 cm -1 ) in chitosan. The degree of acetylation of the extracted chitosan was observed to be 57.43%, which makes it suitable as a biopolymer for biomedical applications. Prominent peaks observed with micro-Raman studies were at 484 cm -1 (14,264 counts/s), 2138 cm -1 (45,061 counts/s), and 2447 cm -1 (45,636 counts/s). XRD studies showed the crystalline nature of the polymer, and the maximum peak was observed at 20.04°. Elemental analysis showed a considerable decrease in the percentage of nitrogen and carbon upon the conversion of chitin to chitosan, while chitosan had a higher percentage of hydrogen and sulfur. The antibacterial activities of chitosan from the horse mussel were found to be efficient at a 200 μg/mL concentration against all the bacterial strains tested with a comparatively higher antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli (9 mm) and Bacillus subtilis (8 mm).
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