Publication: Living Colours: Development of Microbial Culture Collection for Use as Microbial Colour Pigments in Textile Dyes
Type:
Article
Date
2023-11-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Humanities and Sciences, SLIIT
Abstract
The textile industry is one of the largest worldwide
polluters of clean water due to the heavy use of
synthetic dyes. Synthetic dyes are harmful to
aquatic life and to human health. To overcome this,
natural dyes are being explored as a healthier and
more eco-friendly alternative. Several advantages
such as ease of extraction, availability, high yields
and no seasonal variation make microbial pigments
the most ideal source of natural pigments.
This study was done to isolate colour pigment
producing bacteria and fungi from soil collected
from organic farms from various locations in Sri
Lanka. In total, 9 pigment producing bacteria and
3 pigment producing fungi were isolated. Gause’s
synthetic agar yielded the most pigmented
isolates. Extracellular pigments produced by 5 of
the bacterial isolates were extracted by a waterbased
method. The antibacterial activity of the
pigments in their crude and concentrated forms
was tested using the well diffusion method against
E.coli ATCC 8739 and Staphylococcus aureus ATCC
6538P. Inhibition zone against S.aureus was
observed for both crude (12.33±0.58mm) and
concentrated pigments (9.67±0.58mm) extracted
from purple pigment producing bacterial isolate
(BPU). This pigment has the potential to be used
in antibacterial textile preparation. Extracted
pigments were used to dye scoured cotton fabric
with the use of 3% alum as mordant. Pigment from
BPU isolate resulted in better coloured fabric.
Description
Keywords
Textile industry, Natural pigments, Microbial pigments
Citation
Hewagama H.L. , Somarathna G.M.T.K., Herath L., Peiris, S.E. (2023). Living Colours: Development of Microbial Culture Collection for Use as Microbial Colour Pigments in Textile Dyes. Proceedings of SLIIT International Conference on Advancements in Sciences and Humanities, 1-2 December, Colombo, pages 376-380.
