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1.
The metalloregulatory protein MerR, which exhibits high affinity and selectivity toward mercury, was exploited for the construction of microbial biosorbents specific for mercury removal. Whole-cell sorbents were constructed with MerR genetically engineered onto the surface of Escherichia coli cells by using an ice nucleation protein anchor. The presence of surface-exposed MerR on the engineered strains enabled sixfold-higher Hg(2+) biosorption than that found in the wild-type JM109 cells. Hg(2+) binding via MerR was very specific, with no observable decline even in the presence of 100-fold excess Cd(2+) and Zn(2+). The Hg(2+) binding property of the whole-cell sorbents was also insensitive to different ionic strengths, pHs, and the presence of metal chelators. Since metalloregulatory proteins are currently available for a wide variety of toxic heavy metals, our results suggest that microbial biosorbents overexpressing metalloregulatory proteins may be used similarly for the cleanup of other important heavy metals.  相似文献   

2.
To explore chitin-binding domain (ChBD)-based cell immobilization, a tripartite gene fusion consisting of an in-frame fusion of ChBD to lpp and ompA was constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli. ChBD-displayed cells exhibited highly specific and stable binding to chitin within a wide range of pHs (5 to 8) and temperatures (15 to 37°C). These results illustrate the promising use of this approach for engineering applications.  相似文献   

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Mercury is present in different types of industrial effluents that cause environmental pollution. Conventional methods such as precipitation, oxidation/reduction, ion exchange, filtration, membranes, and evaporation are extremely expensive or inefficient for the removal of mercury from diluted solutions. In this context, the biosorption process has recently been shown to be an effective and economical method. The present work describes the mercury biosorption ability of three fungi, i.e., Aspergillus niger, Trichoderma viride, and Humicola insolens. Monocultures of these strains and 10 different combinations were investigated. The consortium of 24-h-old H. insolens and 48-h-old of A. niger and T. viride in equal ratio was found to be compatible. This consortium decreased the residual mercury from 2.02 to 0.001 μ g/L after 7 days of incubation, and caused a significant reduction in chemical oxygen demand (COD) (92.6%) from an initial level of 21 mg/L.  相似文献   

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The metalloregulatory protein MerR which plays important roles in mer operon system exhibits high affinity and selectivity toward mercury (II) (Hg2+). In order to improve the adsorption ability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae for Hg2+, MerR was displayed on the surface of S. cerevisiae for the first time with an α-agglutinin-based display system in this study. The merR gene was synthesized after being optimized and added restriction endonuclease sites EcoR I and Mlu I. The display of MerR was indirectly confirmed by the enhanced adsorption ability of S. cerevisiae for Hg2+ and colony PCR. The hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry was applied to measure the Hg2+ content in water. The engineered yeast strain not only showed higher tolerance to Hg, but also their adsorption ability was much higher than that of origin and control strains. The engineered yeast could adsorb Hg2+ under a wide range of pH levels, and it could also adsorb Hg2+ effectively with Cd2+ and Cu2+ coexistence. Furthermore, the engineered yeast strain could adsorb ultra-trace Hg2+ effectively. The results above showed that the surface-engineered yeast strain could adsorb Hg2+ under complex environmental conditions and could be used for the biosorption and bioremediation of environmental Hg contaminants.  相似文献   

7.
The metalloregulatory protein ArsR, which offers high affinity and selectivity toward arsenite, was overexpressed in Escherichia coli in an attempt to increase the bioaccumulation of arsenic. Overproduction of ArsR resulted in elevated levels of arsenite bioaccumulation but also a severe reduction in cell growth. Incorporation of an elastin-like polypeptide as the fusion partner to ArsR (ELP153AR) improved cell growth by twofold without compromising the ability to accumulate arsenite. Resting cells overexpressing ELP153AR accumulated 5- and 60-fold-higher levels of arsenate and arsenite than control cells without ArsR overexpression. Conversely, no significant improvement in Cd2+ or Zn2+ accumulation was observed, validating the specificity of ArsR. The high affinity of ArsR allowed 100% removal of 50 ppb of arsenite from contaminated water with these engineered cells, providing a technology useful to comply with the newly approved U.S. Environmental Protection Agency limit of 10 ppb. These results open up the possibility of using cells overexpressing ArsR as an inexpensive, high-affinity ligand for arsenic removal from contaminated drinking and ground water.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Biosorption of heavy metals by gram-positive, non-pathogenic and non-toxicogenic Paenibacillus polymyxa P13 was evaluated. Copper was chosen as a model element because it is a pollutant originated from several industries. An EPS (exopolysaccharide)-producing phenotype exhibited significant Cu(II) biosorption capacity. Under optimal assay conditions (pH 6 and 25 °C), the adsorption isotherm for Cu(II) in aqueous solutions obeyed the Langmuir model. A high q value (biosorption capacity) was observed with whole cells (qmax=112 mgCu g−1). EPS production was associated with hyperosmotic stress by high salt (1 M NaCl), which led to a significant increase in the biosorption capacity of whole cells (qmax=150 mgCu g−1). Biosorption capacity for Cu(II) of the purified EPS was investigated. The maximum biosorption value (q) of 1602 mg g−1 observed with purified EPS at 0.1 mg ml−1 was particularly promising for use in field applications.  相似文献   

9.
Inexpensive technologies with less-than-optimal efficiencies as a strategy for countering economic restraints to pollution control have been evaluated by using a laboratory-scale biotreatment process for copper-containing effluent. Economizing measures include the use of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) cylinders fashioned from commercially available flexible PVC conduit to support a biofilm that was cultured in an inexpensive medium prepared in wastewater. The biofilm was challenged by aqueous copper solution in a bioreactor and subsequently analyzed under a scanning electron microscope with energy-dispersive X-ray microanalysis.  相似文献   

10.
Acidogenicity and aciduricity are the main virulence factors of the cavity-causing bacterium Streptococcus mutans. Monitoring at the individual cell level the temporal and spatial distribution of acid produced by this important oral pathogen is central for our understanding of these key virulence factors especially when S. mutans resides in multi-species microbial communities. In this study, we explored the application of pH-sensitive green fluorescent proteins (pHluorins) to investigate these important features. Ecliptic pHluorin was functionally displayed on the cell surface of S. mutans as a fusion protein with SpaP. The resulting strain (O87) was used to monitor temporal and spatial pH changes in the microenvironment of S. mutans cells under both planktonic and biofilm conditions. Using strain O87, we revealed a rapid pH drop in the microenviroment of S. mutans microcolonies prior to the decrease in the macro-environment pH following sucrose fermentation. Meanwhile, a non-uniform pH distribution was observed within S. mutans biofilms, reflecting differences in microbial metabolic activity. Furthermore, strain O87 was successfully used to monitor the S. mutans acid production profiles within dual- and multispecies oral biofilms. Based on these findings, the ecliptic pHluorin allows us to investigate in vivo and in situ acid production and distribution by the cariogenic species S. mutans.  相似文献   

11.
Phytochelatins (PCs) are metal-binding cysteine-rich peptides, enzymatically synthesized in plants and yeasts from glutathione in response to heavy metal stress by PC synthase (EC 2.3.2.15). In an attempt to increase the ability of bacterial cells to accumulate heavy metals, the Arabidopsis thaliana gene encoding PC synthase (AtPCS) was expressed in Escherichia coli. A marked accumulation of PCs was observed in vivo together with a decrease in the glutathione cellular content. When bacterial cells expressing AtPCS were placed in the presence of heavy metals such as cadmium or the metalloid arsenic, cellular metal contents were increased 20- and 50-fold, respectively. We discuss the possibility of using genes of the PC biosynthetic pathway to design bacterial strains or higher plants with increased abilities to accumulate toxic metals, and also arsenic, for use in bioremediation and/or phytoremediation processes.  相似文献   

12.
A colorimetric method is presented for the quantitative determination of dye uptake by bacterial cells. Experiments showed that the dye to cell ratio was of major importance in controlling the amount of dye taken up per weight of bacterial cells. Approximate dye saturation of cells could be obtained (at pH 6.1 to 6.3) although the dye uptake curves did not absolutely level off.  相似文献   

13.
Disruption of Bacterial Cells by a Synthetic Zeolite   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
The use of a synthetic zeolite (type 4A, Union Carbide Corp., Linde Div., New York, N.Y.) in a procedure for the preparation of pure cell wall fractions proved successful for many gram-positive, gram-negative, and acid-fast bacteria, as well as for some fungi. The technique, however, was found to be limited in effectiveness for Rhodospirillum rubrum, Gaffkya tetragena, and Sarcina lutea, and not applicable to preparations of heat killed microorganisms. The possible mechanisms of zeolite action, together with the effect of the disruptive procedure on the chemical composition of cell wall fragments, were investigated also.  相似文献   

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Understanding the transport and behavior of bacteria in the environment has broad implications in diverse areas, ranging from agriculture to groundwater quality, risk assessment, and bioremediation. The ability to reliably track and enumerate specific bacterial populations in the context of native communities and environments is key to developing this understanding. We report a novel bacterial tracking approach, based on altering the stable carbon isotope value (δ13C) of bacterial cells, which provides specific and sensitive detection and quantification of those cells in environmental samples. This approach was applied to the study of bacterial transport in saturated porous media. The transport of introduced organisms was indicated by mass spectrometric analysis of groundwater samples, where the presence of 13C-enriched bacteria resulted in increased δ13C values of the samples, allowing specific and sensitive detection and enumeration of the bacteria of interest. We demonstrate the ability to produce highly 13C-enriched bacteria, present data indicating that results obtained with this approach accurately represent intact introduced bacteria, and include field data on the use of this stable isotope approach to monitor in situ bacterial transport. This detection strategy allows sensitive detection of an introduced, unmodified bacterial strain in the presence of the indigenous bacterial community, including itself in its unenriched form.  相似文献   

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A set of mercury resistance plasmids was obtained from wheat rhizosphere soil amended or not amended with mercuric chloride via exogenous plasmid isolation by using Pseudomonas fluorescens R2f, Pseudomonas putida UWC1, and Enterobacter cloacae BE1 as recipient strains. The isolation frequencies were highest from soil amended with high levels of mercury, and the isolation frequencies from unamended soil were low. With P. putida UWC1 as the recipient, the isolation frequency was significantly enhanced in wheat rhizosphere compared to bulk soil. Twenty transconjugants were analyzed per recipient strain. All of the transconjugants contained plasmids which were between 40 and 50 kb long. Eight selected plasmids were distributed among five groups, as shown by restriction digestion coupled with a similarity matrix analysis. However, all of the plasmids formed a tight group, as judged by hybridization with two whole-plasmid probes and comparisons with other plasmids in dot blot hybridization analyses. The results of replicon typing and broad-host-range incompatibility (Inc) group-specific PCR suggested that the plasmid isolates were not related to any previously described Inc group. Although resistance to copper, resistance to streptomycin, and/or resistance to chloramphenicol was found in several plasmids, catabolic sequences were generally not identified. One plasmid, pEC10, transferred into a variety of bacteria belonging to the β and γ subdivisions of the class Proteobacteria and mobilized as well as retromobilized the IncQ plasmid pSUP104. A PCR method for detection of pEC10-like replicons was used, in conjunction with other methods, to monitor pEC10-homologous sequences in mercury-polluted and unpolluted soils. The presence of mercury enhanced the prevalence of pEC10-like replicons in soil and rhizosphere bacterial populations.The potential use of genetically modified bacteria in agriculture has raised questions pertaining to the spread of introduced recombinant DNA through soil bacterial communities. Gene transfer in soil via conjugation has received much attention, and the focus of most studies has been the transfer and fate of introduced plasmids (6, 22, 2729, 39). Under favorable conditions, in specific soil microhabitats, or under selection conditions, both self-transmissible and mobilizable plasmids present in introduced hosts can be transferred to introduced recipients, as well as to a variety of indigenous bacteria (15, 20, 27, 28, 33). In particular, rhizospheres of crop plants, such as wheat and sugar beet, provide conditions conducive to conjugal plasmid transfer between bacterial inhabitants (15, 36). When genetically modified bacteria are developed as inoculants for the rhizosphere, insertion of heterologous DNA into non-self-transmissible plasmids or the chromosome might restrict conjugal transfer of this DNA to members of the indigenous bacterial community. However, mobilizing or retromobilizing (33) plasmids present in indigenous soil bacteria could potentially still effect the transfer of the less mobile heterologous DNA via chromosome or plasmid mobilization, which may involve cointegration (9, 19, 31). Such plasmids might thus be responsible for the escape of heterologous DNA from genetically modified bacteria introduced into soil.There is a paucity of knowledge concerning the incidence of plasmids with mobilizing capacity in soils and rhizospheres, as well as concerning the effects of soil factors, such as stresses resulting from pollution or from natural causes (e.g., rhizosphere acidity), on plasmid prevalence and transfer (e.g., reference 38). Whereas it has been suggested that chemical stress often does not enhance plasmid incidence in selected soil bacterial populations (40), pollution in river water or mines (in particular mercury pollution) has been found to exert a selective (enhancing) effect (4, 13).Plasmids of environmental bacteria have classically been obtained by endogenous isolation procedures (20). Endogenous isolation implies that putative plasmid hosts with the phenotype of interest are isolated from soil, after which plasmids are extracted from pure cultures of these strains. On the other hand, pioneering studies performed with river stone epilithon (9) and later extended to soil and sediment (32) have shown that plasmids can be obtained directly from indigenous bacterial communities in new hosts by exogenous isolation. In this approach, plasmids are captured in selectable recipient strains by using mating between these strains and the total bacterial community obtained from an environmental sample. Following incubation, the mating mixture is plated with selection for the recipient and an additional marker gene presumedly located on a plasmid present in the indigenous bacteria (6). The advantage of the exogenous isolation procedure is that no culturing step is required in the mating, which thus allows isolation of plasmids from nonculturable hosts. Furthermore, plasmids are directly selected for their transfer capacity, in addition to the presence of a specific selectable marker.In this study, exogenous plasmid isolation was employed to obtain transferable plasmids from soil bacteria by using mercury resistance as the selectable marker. The objective of this work was to gain insight into the potential present in soil bacterial populations to (retro)mobilize genes out of introduced bacteria into members of the soil bacterial community. Since the incidence of plasmids in soil bacteria is likely influenced by soil ecological factors and selection pressure, the presence of wheat roots and selection by mercury (25) were studied as experimental variables.  相似文献   

18.
Methylmercury compounds are very toxic for most organisms. Here, we investigated the potential of earthworms to methylate inorganic-Hg. We hypothesized that the anaerobic and nutrient-rich conditions in the digestive tracts of earthworm''s promote the methylation of Hg through the action of their gut bacteria. Earthworms were either grown in sterile soils treated with an inorganic (HgCl2) or organic (CH3HgCl) Hg source, or were left untreated. After 30 days of incubation, the total-Hg and methyl-Hg concentrations in the soils, earthworms, and their casts were analyzed. The impact of Hg on the bacterial community compositions in earthworms was also studied. Tissue concentrations of methyl-Hg in earthworms grown in soils treated with inorganic-Hg were about six times higher than in earthworms grown in soils without Hg. Concentrations of methyl-Hg in the soils and earthworm casts remained at significantly lower levels suggesting that Hg was mainly methylated in the earthworms. Bacterial communities in earthworms were mostly affected by methyl-Hg treatment. Terminal-restriction fragments (T-RFs) affiliated to Firmicutes were sensitive to inorganic and methyl-Hg, whereas T-RFs related to Betaproteobacteria were tolerant to the Hg treatments. Sulphate-reducing bacteria were detected in earthworms but not in soils.  相似文献   

19.
The cytological pattern of infection of a host pseudomonad with PM2, a lipid-containing bacterial virus, was investigated by electron microscopy. Normal and infected cells frequently contain a myelin figure, which is found in the nucleoid region or at the periphery of the cell. The most striking finding in this investigation was that completed virions are found in the cell adjacent to or in association with the cytoplasmic membrane. This localization is precise; virions are not found elsewhere in infected cells. The completed virions occasionally appear to be attached to the cytoplasmic membrane. The virus contains a darkly staining core surrounded by a tripartite envelope of a thickness of approximately 70 A, which is identical to the thickness of the cytoplasmic membrane. Lysing cells appear to undergo extensive damage of the cytoplasmic membrane prior to rupture of the L layer of the cell wall.  相似文献   

20.
While much is already known about the basic metabolism of bacterial cells, many fundamental questions are still surprisingly unanswered, including for instance how they generate and maintain specific cell shapes, establish polarity, segregate their genomes, and divide. In order to understand these phenomena, imaging technologies are needed that bridge the resolution gap between fluorescence light microscopy and higher-resolution methods such as X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy.Electron cryotomography (ECT) is an emerging technology that does just this, allowing the ultrastructure of cells to be visualized in a near-native state, in three dimensions (3D), with "macromolecular" resolution (~4nm).1, 2 In ECT, cells are imaged in a vitreous, "frozen-hydrated" state in a cryo transmission electron microscope (cryoTEM) at low temperature (< -180°C). For slender cells (up to ~500 nm in thickness3), intact cells are plunge-frozen within media across EM grids in cryogens such as ethane or ethane/propane mixtures. Thicker cells and biofilms can also be imaged in a vitreous state by first "high-pressure freezing" and then, "cryo-sectioning" them. A series of two-dimensional projection images are then collected through the sample as it is incrementally tilted along one or two axes. A three-dimensional reconstruction, or "tomogram" can then be calculated from the images. While ECT requires expensive instrumentation, in recent years, it has been used in a few labs to reveal the structures of various external appendages, the structures of different cell envelopes, the positions and structures of cytoskeletal filaments, and the locations and architectures of large macromolecular assemblies such as flagellar motors, internal compartments and chemoreceptor arrays.1, 2In this video article we illustrate how to image cells with ECT, including the processes of sample preparation, data collection, tomogram reconstruction, and interpretation of the results through segmentation and in some cases correlation with light microscopy.  相似文献   

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