Nitrosoguanidines
Latest Paper:
Screening of new microorganism being able to produce efficiently flocculants was carried out. A new model for screening efficient flocculant-producing strains was designed and tested. The results showed that this model for screening efficient flocculant-producing strains is very reliable and can greatly shorten the screening period. 13 flocculant-producing strains were isolated from activated sludge by conventional method. A strain, designated as HHE6, produced the bioflocculant with the turbidity removal 98% for kaolin suspension. Six of 13 strains selected as the original strains were treated with NTG as mutagen, and five mutant strains (HHE-P7, HHE-A8, HHE-P21, HHE-P24, HHE-A26) with high flocculation efficiency was obtained by selection, which exhibited the flocculation rate for kaolin suspension above 90%. Strains HHE6, HHE-P7, and HHE-P24 were classified as Penicillium purpurogenum, HHE-P21 as Penicillium cyclopium, HHE-A26 as Aspergillus versicolor and HHE-A8 as Aspergillus fumigatus, and it is hitherto unreported for biofloccutant-producing strains of Penicillium. The growth of the six strains (HHE6, HHE-P7, HHE-A8, HHE-P21, HHE-P24, HHE-A26) had similar curves, i.e. firstly increasing rapidly, keeping relatively constant then and finally decreasing gradually with cultivation time. The production of bioflocculants by strains showed the similar pattern to strain growth.
Most cited papers:
The promoting effect of sodium deoxycholate (DC) on colon carcinogenesis was studied in female F344 germfree rats. Animals received intrarectal (ir) instillations of N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) for 4 weeks (total dose, 16 mg/rat), then weekly ir doses of DC (total dose, 3 g/rat); the rats were autopsied 52 weeks after the first injection. DC increased the number of MNNG-induced colon adenocarcinomas. No tumors were in the colons of germfree rats given DC alone. It was concluded that DC (present in high concentrations in human stools) had a promoting effect on colon carcinogenesis in rats.





