4.6 Article

Fungal Biodeterioration of a Historical Manuscript Dating Back to the 14th Century: An Insight into Various Fungal Strains and Their Enzymatic Activities

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life12111821

Keywords

historical manuscript; fungal deterioration; hydrolytic enzymes; leather conservation

Funding

  1. Taif University for the Researchers Supporting Project, Taif University, Saudi Arabia [TURSP-2020/83]
  2. Cairo University
  3. Al-Azhar University

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This study assesses the deterioration of a 14th-century historical manuscript in the Library of the Arabic Language Academy in Cairo, Egypt. The research focuses on exploring the role of various fungal strains in the biodeterioration of the manuscript through their secretion of hydrolytic enzymes. Different techniques are used to evaluate the deterioration, and the fungal strains associated with the manuscript are isolated, identified, and assessed for their degradation activities. The findings show that the manuscript exhibits signs of deterioration including color change, brittleness, erosion, and removal of the surface pattern. The identified fungal strains produce hydrolytic enzymes, such as cellulase, amylase, gelatinase, and pectinase, which play a key role in biodegradation.
This study aims to assess the deterioration aspects of a historical manuscript dating back to the 14th century that was deposited in the Library of the Arabic Language Academy, Cairo, Egypt. The study aims at the exploration of the role of various fungal strains that had colonized this deteriorated manuscript in its biodeterioration through their efficacy in the secretion of various hydrolytic enzymes. To evaluate the deterioration, various techniques, including visual inspection, attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-Ray diffraction analysis (XRD), color change, and pH value, were utilized. The fungal strains linked to the historical document were isolated, identified, and evaluated for their deterioration activities. The findings demonstrate that the manuscript exhibits a variety of deterioration signs including color change, brittleness and weakness, erosion, and removal of the grain surface pattern in leather binding. According to the ATR-FTIR, the chemical composition of the historical paper and leather underwent some alterations. The historical paper has a lower level of cellulose crystallinity than the control sample. Penicillium chrysogenum (two isolates), P. citrinum (four isolates), Aspergillus ustus (three isolates), A. terreus (two isolates), A. chinensis (one isolate), Paecilomyces sp. (one isolate), and Induratia sp. (one isolate) were among the fourteen fungal strains identified as being associated with the historical manuscript. These fungal strains produced several hydrolytic enzymes with high activity, such as cellulase, amylase, gelatinase, and pectinase, which play a key role in biodegradation.

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