Publications by authors named "Luz Marina Lizarazo Forero"

Using biopolymers functionalized with antibacterial agents to manufacture active packaging is a clean alternative to mitigate food losses due to postharvest plant diseases. In this study, two mycosynthetized AgNPs impregnation methodologies on cotton (cationization and biochemical reduction) were used to obtain the antibacterial fibers (A-AgNPs-C and A-AgNPs-IBR), which, in addition to being characterized by SEM-EDX, XRD, were evaluated as antibacterial materials. The cotton fibers showed growth inhibition of at 48 h.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Metallic nanoparticles currently show multiple applications in the industrial, clinical and environmental fields due to their particular physicochemical characteristics. Conventional approaches for the synthesis of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are based on physicochemical processes which, although they show advantages such as high productivity and good monodispersity of the nanoparticles obtained, have disadvantages such as the high energy cost of the process and the use of harmful radiation or toxic chemical reagents that can generate highly polluting residues. Given the current concern about the environment and the potential cytotoxic effects of AgNPs, once they are released into the environment, a new green chemistry approach to obtain these nanoparticles called biosynthesis has emerged.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In a bioprospecting study of paramo soils cultivated with potato (Solanum tuberosum), 50 fungal isolates were obtained and evaluated for their nitrate reductase (NR) activity, given the role played by this enzyme in the biosynthesis of silver nanoparticles (AgNps). Five isolates strain with high NR activity belonging to Penicillium simplicissimum, Aspergillus niger, and Fusarium oxysporum species were selected, verifying the presence of the NR enzyme in their enzymatic extract. Later, these strains showed the ability to biosynthesize AgNps with distorted spherical shapes and sizes ranging from 15 to 45 nm.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF