共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Species diversity improves the efficiency of mercury-reducing biofilms under changing environmental conditions 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Von Canstein H Kelly S Li Y Wagner-Döbler I 《Applied and environmental microbiology》2002,68(6):2829-2837
Six mercury-resistant environmental proteobacterial isolates and one genetically modified mercury-resistant Pseudomonas putida strain were analyzed for physiological traits of adaptive relevance in an environment of packed-bed bioreactors designed for the decontamination of mercury-polluted chlor-alkali wastewater. The strains displayed characteristic differences in each trait (i.e., biofilm formation capability, growth rate in mercury contaminated wastewaters, and mercury reduction efficiency). Subsequently, they were immobilized either as a monoculture or as a mixed culture on porous carrier material in packed-bed bioreactors through which different batches of filter-sterilized industrial chlor-alkali wastewater were pumped. In monospecies bioreactors, the mercury retention efficiency was sensitive to rapidly increasing mercury concentrations in the wastewater. Mixed culture biofilms displayed a high mercury retention efficiency that was not affected by rapid increases in mercury or continuously high mercury concentrations. The dynamic in the community composition of the mixed culture bioreactors was determined by ribosomal intergenic spacer polymorphism analysis. Mercury-mediated selective pressure decreased the number of prevalent strains. Microbial diversity was completely restored after easing of the selective pressure. Microbial diversity provides a reservoir of strains with complementary ecological niches that results in a superior bioreactor performance under changing environmental conditions. 相似文献
2.
Removal of Mercury from Chloralkali Electrolysis Wastewater by a Mercury-Resistant Pseudomonas putida Strain 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
下载免费PDF全文
![点击此处可从《Applied microbiology》网站下载免费的PDF全文](/ch/ext_images/free.gif)
H. von Canstein Y. Li K. N. Timmis W.-D. Deckwer I. Wagner-Dbler 《Applied microbiology》1999,65(12):5279-5284
A mercury-resistant bacterial strain which is able to reduce ionic mercury to metallic mercury was used to remediate in laboratory columns mercury-containing wastewater produced during electrolytic production of chlorine. Factory effluents from several chloralkali plants in Europe were analyzed, and these effluents contained total mercury concentrations between 1.6 and 7.6 mg/liter and high chloride concentrations (up to 25 g/liter) and had pH values which were either acidic (pH 2.4) or alkaline (pH 13.0). A mercury-resistant bacterial strain, Pseudomonas putida Spi3, was isolated from polluted river sediments. Biofilms of P. putida Spi3 were grown on porous carrier material in laboratory column bioreactors. The bioreactors were continuously fed with sterile synthetic model wastewater or nonsterile, neutralized, aerated chloralkali wastewater. We found that sodium chloride concentrations up to 24 g/liter did not inhibit microbial mercury retention and that mercury concentrations up to 7 mg/liter could be treated with the bacterial biofilm with no loss of activity. When wastewater samples from three different chloralkali plants in Europe were used, levels of mercury retention efficiency between 90 and 98% were obtained. Thus, microbial mercury removal is a potential biological treatment for chloralkali electrolysis wastewater. 相似文献
3.
Spatially oscillating activity and microbial succession of mercury-reducing biofilms in a technical-scale bioremediation system 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
von Canstein H Li Y Leonhäuser J Haase E Felske A Deckwer WD Wagner-Döbler I 《Applied and environmental microbiology》2002,68(4):1938-1946
Mercury-contaminated chemical wastewater of a mercury cell chloralkali plant was cleaned on site by a technical-scale bioremediation system. Microbial mercury reduction of soluble Hg(II) to precipitating Hg(0) decreased the mercury load of the wastewater during its flow through the bioremediation system by up to 99%. The system consisted of a packed-bed bioreactor, where most of the wastewater's mercury load was retained, and an activated carbon filter, where residual mercury was removed from the bioreactor effluent by both physical adsorption and biological reduction. In response to the oscillation of the mercury concentration in the bioreactor inflow, the zone of maximum mercury reduction oscillated regularly between the lower and the upper bioreactor horizons or the carbon filter. At low mercury concentrations, maximum mercury reduction occurred near the inflow at the bottom of the bioreactor. At high concentrations, the zone of maximum activity moved to the upper horizons. The composition of the bioreactor and carbon filter biofilms was investigated by 16S-23S ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer polymorphism analysis. Analysis of spatial biofilm variation showed an increasing microbial diversity along a gradient of decreasing mercury concentrations. Temporal analysis of the bioreactor community revealed a stable abundance of two prevalent strains and a succession of several invading mercury-resistant strains which was driven by the selection pressure of high mercury concentrations. In the activated carbon filter, a lower selection pressure permitted a steady increase in diversity during 240 days of operation and the establishment of one mercury-sensitive invader. 相似文献
4.
Spatially Oscillating Activity and Microbial Succession of Mercury-Reducing Biofilms in a Technical-Scale Bioremediation System 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
下载免费PDF全文
![点击此处可从《Applied microbiology》网站下载免费的PDF全文](/ch/ext_images/free.gif)
Harald von Canstein Ying Li Johannes Leonhuser Elke Haase Andreas Felske Wolf-Dieter Deckwer Irene Wagner-Dbler 《Applied microbiology》2002,68(4):1938-1946
Mercury-contaminated chemical wastewater of a mercury cell chloralkali plant was cleaned on site by a technical-scale bioremediation system. Microbial mercury reduction of soluble Hg(II) to precipitating Hg(0) decreased the mercury load of the wastewater during its flow through the bioremediation system by up to 99%. The system consisted of a packed-bed bioreactor, where most of the wastewater's mercury load was retained, and an activated carbon filter, where residual mercury was removed from the bioreactor effluent by both physical adsorption and biological reduction. In response to the oscillation of the mercury concentration in the bioreactor inflow, the zone of maximum mercury reduction oscillated regularly between the lower and the upper bioreactor horizons or the carbon filter. At low mercury concentrations, maximum mercury reduction occurred near the inflow at the bottom of the bioreactor. At high concentrations, the zone of maximum activity moved to the upper horizons. The composition of the bioreactor and carbon filter biofilms was investigated by 16S-23S ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer polymorphism analysis. Analysis of spatial biofilm variation showed an increasing microbial diversity along a gradient of decreasing mercury concentrations. Temporal analysis of the bioreactor community revealed a stable abundance of two prevalent strains and a succession of several invading mercury-resistant strains which was driven by the selection pressure of high mercury concentrations. In the activated carbon filter, a lower selection pressure permitted a steady increase in diversity during 240 days of operation and the establishment of one mercury-sensitive invader. 相似文献
5.
Wagner-Döbler I 《Applied microbiology and biotechnology》2003,62(2-3):124-133
Mercury is an extremely toxic pollutant that is currently being emitted mainly by low level industrial sources. It is distributed globally through the atmosphere, from where it precipitates onto the surface of the Earth, enters aquatic organisms, accumulates in fish and finally affects the health of human populations. Microbes have evolved a mechanism for mercury detoxification [mercury resistance operon ( mer)] based on intracellular reduction of Hg(2+) to non-toxic Hg(0) by the mercuric reductase enzyme and subsequent diffusional loss of Hg(0) from the cell. It was shown that Hg(0) produced by microbial detoxification can be retained quantitatively in packed bed bioreactors, in which biofilms of mercury-resistant bacteria are grown on porous carrier material. This review describes operation of this system on a technical, fully automated, scale, and its operation at a chloralkali electrolysis factory. It was shown to work with high efficiency under fluctuating mercury concentrations and to be robust against transiently toxic conditions. The gradient of mercury concentration in the technical scale system exerted a strong selective pressure on the microbial community, which resulted in a succession of mercury-resistant strains at high mercury concentrations and an increase in phylogenetic and functional diversity at low mercury concentrations. Clean-up of mercury-containing wastewater by mercury-resistant microbes is a simple, environmentally friendly and cost-effective alternative to current treatment technologies. 相似文献
6.
von Canstein H Li Y Timmis KN Deckwer WD Wagner-Döbler I 《Applied and environmental microbiology》1999,65(12):5279-5284
A mercury-resistant bacterial strain which is able to reduce ionic mercury to metallic mercury was used to remediate in laboratory columns mercury-containing wastewater produced during electrolytic production of chlorine. Factory effluents from several chloralkali plants in Europe were analyzed, and these effluents contained total mercury concentrations between 1.6 and 7.6 mg/liter and high chloride concentrations (up to 25 g/liter) and had pH values which were either acidic (pH 2.4) or alkaline (pH 13.0). A mercury-resistant bacterial strain, Pseudomonas putida Spi3, was isolated from polluted river sediments. Biofilms of P. putida Spi3 were grown on porous carrier material in laboratory column bioreactors. The bioreactors were continuously fed with sterile synthetic model wastewater or nonsterile, neutralized, aerated chloralkali wastewater. We found that sodium chloride concentrations up to 24 g/liter did not inhibit microbial mercury retention and that mercury concentrations up to 7 mg/liter could be treated with the bacterial biofilm with no loss of activity. When wastewater samples from three different chloralkali plants in Europe were used, levels of mercury retention efficiency between 90 and 98% were obtained. Thus, microbial mercury removal is a potential biological treatment for chloralkali electrolysis wastewater. 相似文献
7.
The long-term performance of bioreactors retaining mercury from contaminated industrial wastewater was analyzed at the laboratory scale, and its response to mechanical perturbations (gas bubbles and shaking) as well as to physical (increased temperature and hydraulic load) and chemical stresses (increased mercury concentration) likely to occur during on site operation was studied. Two packed-bed bioreactors with 80-cm(3) lava chips as biofilm carrier were inoculated with nine Hg(II)-resistant natural isolates of alpha- and gamma-proteobacteria. Chloralkali wastewater containing ionic mercury (3.0 to 9.7 mg/L Hg(2+)), amended with sucrose and yeast extract, flowed through the bioreactors at 160 mL/h. During the 16-month investigation the bioreactors showed no sign of depleted performance in terms of mercury-retaining capacity. After 16 months, both bioreactors still retained 96% of the mercury load. The performance of the bioreactors was sensitive to mechanical perturbations (e.g., sheer forces of gas bubbles). Shifts to higher Hg(2+) inflow concentrations initially decreased the mercury retention efficacy slightly. However, the bioreactors could adapt to Hg(2+) concentrations of up to 7.6 mg/L within several days. Old biofilms were less affected than the younger ones. The performance of the bioreactors was not affected by an increase in temperature up to 41 degrees C and an increased volumetric load (up to 240 mL/h). The bioreactors regained activity spontaneously after the stress had stopped. Recovery could be accelerated by increased nutrient concentration, although this may lead to blocking of the packed bed. 相似文献
8.
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans was used in fixed-film bioreactors to oxidize ferrous sulfate to ferric sulfate. Glass beads, ion-exchange resin, and activated-carbon particles were tested as support matrix materials. Activated carbon was tested in both a packed-bed bioreactor and a fluidized-bed bioreactor; the other matrix materials were used in packed-bed reactors. Activated carbon displayed the most suitable characteristics for use as a support matrix of T. ferrooxidans fixed-film formation. The reactors were operated within a pH range of 1.35 to 1.5, which effectively reduced the amount of ferric iron precipitation and eliminated diffusion control of mass transfer due to precipitation. The activated-carbon packed-bed reactor displayed the most favorable biomass holdup and kinetic performance related to ferrous sulfate oxidation. The fastest kinetic performance achieved with the activated-carbon packed-bed bioreactor was 78 g of Fe2+ oxidized per liter per h (1,400 mmol of Fe2+ oxidized per liter per h) at a true dilution rate of 40/h, which represents a hydraulic retention time of 1.5 min. 相似文献
9.
The composition of mercury-reducing communities in two bioreactors retaining Hg(II) from chloralkali electrolysis wastewater
for 485 days was analyzed based on effluent community DNA. Packed bed bioreactors with lava chips as carrier of the biofilm
were inoculated with nine Hg(II)-resistant isolates that belonged to the alpha and gamma subdivisions of the proteobacteria.
A rapid DNA-fingerprinting method was applied, using the intergenic spacer region (ISR) of the 16S-23S rDNA for analysis of
the community composition. This allowed discrimination of the inoculum strains down to subspecies level. A merA specific PCR
permitted the discrimination of the community's merA genes. During the 485 days of operation, the bioreactors were exposed
to various physical stresses (mixing, gas bubbles, temperature increase up to 41°C, increased flow velocity) and repeated
high mercury inflow concentrations, resulting in reduced bioreactor performance and decreased culturable cell numbers in the
reactor effluent. Nevertheless, the composition of the microbial community remained rather stable throughout the investigated
time period. Of the inoculum strains, two could be detected throughout, whereas three were sometimes present with varying
periods of nondetection. Two inoculum strains were only detected within the first month. Two strains of gamma-proteobacteria
that were able to reduce ionic mercury invaded the bioreactor community. They did not outcompete established strains and had
no negative effect on the Hg(II)-retention activity of the bioreactors. The community comprised diverse merA genes. The abundance
of merA genes matched the abundance of their respective strains as confirmed by ISR community analysis. The continuously high
selection pressure for mercury resistance maintained a stable and highly active mercury-reducing microbial community within
the bioreactors. 相似文献
10.
I. Wagner-Dbler H. Lünsdorf T. Lübbehüsen H. F. von Canstein Y. Li 《Applied microbiology》2000,66(10):4559-4563
Mercury-reducing biofilms from packed-bed bioreactors treating nonsterile industrial effluents were shown to consist of a monolayer of bacteria by scanning electron microscopy. Droplets of several micrometers in diameter which accumulated outside of the bacterial cells were identified as elemental mercury by electron-dispersive X-ray analysis. The monospecies biofilms of Pseudomonas putida Spi3 initially present were invaded by additional strains, which were identified to the species level by thermogradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) and 16S rDNA sequencing. TGGE community fingerprints of the biofilms showed that they were composed of the effluent bacteria and did not contain uncultivable microorganisms. Of the 13 effluent bacterial strains, 2 were not mercury resistant, while all the others had resistance levels similar to or higher than the inoculant strain. 相似文献
11.
Effects of Cinnabar on Pyrite Oxidation by Thiobacillus ferrooxidans and Cinnabar Mobilization by a Mercury-Resistant Strain 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
下载免费PDF全文
![点击此处可从《Applied microbiology》网站下载免费的PDF全文](/ch/ext_images/free.gif)
The effect of cinnabar on pyrite oxidation by mercury-sensitive and mercury-resistant strains of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans was investigated by using percolation columns. Mercury-resistant strains oxidized pyrite in pyrite-cinnabar mixtures (1 and 10%, wt/wt), whereas a mercury-sensitive strain did not. Elemental mercury was produced by the mercury-resistant strains growing in the pyrite-cinnabar mixtures in percolation columns and in flasks containing cinnabar only. Manometric experiments showed that cinnabar had little effect on oxygen uptake of mercury-sensitive or mercury-resistant cells growing on ferrous sulfate, pyrite, or pyrite-ferrous sulfate mixtures. In addition, shake flask leaching experiments showed that cinnabar had little effect on pyrite oxidation at 1% (wt/wt) but inhibited growth of mercury-sensitive and mercury-resistant strains at 10%. Mercury-resistant strains were unable to grow on cinnabar as an energy source. 相似文献
12.
Two immunologically non-cross-reactive types of mercury reductases were found among Gram-negative and two among Gram-positive mercury-resistant environmental bacteria. Mercury reductases were further discriminated by 'spur' formation immunodiffusion tests. Immunologically indistinguishable mercury reductases were found among strains belonging to phylogenetically distant genera. This suggests a horizontal transfer of mercury resistance genes between these strains. 相似文献
13.
Eusébio A Petruccioli M Lageiro M Federici F Duarte JC 《Journal of industrial microbiology & biotechnology》2004,31(1):29-34
Jet-loop reactors (JLR) used as biological waste treatment processes introduce an additional selective pressure on the natural microbial flora of the incoming effluent. Several high-performing microbial inocula were tested for winery wastewater treatment and the microbial composition was analysed. A microbial consortium was enriched and selected for use with a new type of aerobic JLR. The reactor was operated continuously for more than 1 year using winery wastewaters collected in different seasons. Chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal efficiency was on average greater than 80%, with retention times of 0.8–1 day. Microbial populations were sampled for characterisation after 6 months and at the end of the study. Isolates were identified at genus and/or species level. Almost all isolates belonged to the genera Pseudomonas and Bacillus. Saccharomyces cerevisiae was also found but no filamentous fungi. These results show that a highly adapted population develops in JLRs treating winery effluents as compared to other bioreactors. Aerobic JLRs impose a stringent selective criterion on the composition of the microbial biomass. 相似文献
14.
Biodegradation of dimethyl phthalate with high removal rates in a packed-bed reactor 总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7
Juneson Christopher Ward Owen P. Singh Ajay 《World journal of microbiology & biotechnology》2002,18(1):7-10
Biological treatment of a dimethyl phthalate (DMP)-containing waste stream was evaluated in packed-bed bioreactors using an acclimated mixed bacterial culture. The passive immobilization start-up strategy was successful in the development of a stable biofilm on the packing material in the reactor. Nutrient supplementation significantly improved the removal efficiency. High removal rates with 100% efficiencies of DMP removal were achieved up to the phthalate-loading rate of 560 g/m3 h. 相似文献
15.
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans was used in fixed-film bioreactors to oxidize ferrous sulfate to ferric sulfate. Glass beads, ion-exchange resin, and activated-carbon particles were tested as support matrix materials. Activated carbon was tested in both a packed-bed bioreactor and a fluidized-bed bioreactor; the other matrix materials were used in packed-bed reactors. Activated carbon displayed the most suitable characteristics for use as a support matrix of T. ferrooxidans fixed-film formation. The reactors were operated within a pH range of 1.35 to 1.5, which effectively reduced the amount of ferric iron precipitation and eliminated diffusion control of mass transfer due to precipitation. The activated-carbon packed-bed reactor displayed the most favorable biomass holdup and kinetic performance related to ferrous sulfate oxidation. The fastest kinetic performance achieved with the activated-carbon packed-bed bioreactor was 78 g of Fe oxidized per liter per h (1,400 mmol of Fe oxidized per liter per h) at a true dilution rate of 40/h, which represents a hydraulic retention time of 1.5 min. 相似文献
16.
Microbial retention of mercury from waste streams in a laboratory column containing merA gene bacteria 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
M. Brunke W.-D. Deckwer A. Frischmuth J.M. Horn H. Lünsdorf M. Rhode M. Röhricht K.N. Timmis P. Weppen 《FEMS microbiology reviews》1993,11(1-3):145-152
Abstract: The microorganisms used for the mercury retention experiments were natural isolates and genetically engineered bacteria. All mercury-resistant strains contained the merA gene. Column experiments with these strains were carried out by immobilizing them on different support materials. To obtain kinetic data of the reductase activity for whole cells and the crude extract, batch experiments were carried out under different conditions. 相似文献
17.
Milva Pepi Carlo GaggiEmanuele Bernardini Silvia FocardiArianna Lobianco Marcella RutaValentina Nicolardi Margherita VolterraniSimone Gasperini Giuseppe TrincheraPaola Renzi Massimo GabelliniSilvano E. Focardi 《International biodeterioration & biodegradation》2011,65(1):85-91
This study was aimed to isolate Hg-resistant bacteria from contaminated sediments of the Orbetello Lagoon in Italy and to assess their possible use as biofilms in bioremediation processes. Enrichment cultures prepared from contaminated sediments in the presence of 0.05 mM of mercury and under aerobic conditions allowed the isolation of five heterotrophic bacterial strains. 16S rDNA gene sequencing assigned the isolated strains to the genera Pseudomonas and Psychrobacter. For the first time mercury-resistant bacterial strains belonging to the genus Psychrobacter were evidenced. Minimum inhibitory concentrations in the presence of HgCl2 and of CH3HgCl showed high levels of resistance. EC50 values for the isolated bacterial strains in the presence of HgCl2 and of CH3HgCl confirmed the adaptation to the metal. Hg-resistant strains ORHg1, ORHg4 and ORHg5 showed the capacity to volatilize inorganic and organic mercury to elemental mercury, and formed biofilms on pumice particles, and were shown to play a role in the removal of mercury from sediment leachates. This study reports isolation and characterization of new Hg-resistant bacterial strains and provides novel insight into their possible use in bioremediation processes of mercury polluted sediments. 相似文献
18.
Electrotransformation of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans with plasmids containing a mer determinant.
下载免费PDF全文
![点击此处可从《Journal of bacteriology》网站下载免费的PDF全文](/ch/ext_images/free.gif)
T Kusano K Sugawara C Inoue T Takeshima M Numata T Shiratori 《Journal of bacteriology》1992,174(20):6617-6623
The mer operon from a strain of Thiobacillus ferrooxidans (C. Inoue, K. Sugawara, and T. Kusano, Mol. Microbiol. 5:2707-2718, 1991) consists of the regulatory gene merR and an operator-promoter region followed by merC and merA structural genes and differs from other known gram-negative mer operons. We have constructed four potential shuttle plasmids composed of a T. ferrooxidans-borne cryptic plasmid, a pUC18 plasmid, and the above-mentioned mer determinant as a selectable marker. Mercury ion-sensitive T. ferrooxidans strains were electroporated with constructed plasmids, and one strain, Y4-3 (of 30 independent strains tested), was found to have a transformation efficiency of 120 to 200 mercury-resistant colonies per microgram of plasmid DNA. This recipient strain was confirmed to be T. ferrooxidans by physiological, morphological, and chemotaxonomical data. The transformants carried a plasmid with no physical rearrangements through 25 passages under no selective pressure. Cell extracts showed mercury ion-dependent NADPH oxidation activity. 相似文献
19.
Wagner-Döbler I Lünsdorf H Lübbehüsen T von Canstein HF Li Y 《Applied and environmental microbiology》2000,66(10):4559-4563
Mercury-reducing biofilms from packed-bed bioreactors treating nonsterile industrial effluents were shown to consist of a monolayer of bacteria by scanning electron microscopy. Droplets of several micrometers in diameter which accumulated outside of the bacterial cells were identified as elemental mercury by electron-dispersive X-ray analysis. The monospecies biofilms of Pseudomonas putida Spi3 initially present were invaded by additional strains, which were identified to the species level by thermogradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) and 16S rDNA sequencing. TGGE community fingerprints of the biofilms showed that they were composed of the effluent bacteria and did not contain uncultivable microorganisms. Of the 13 effluent bacterial strains, 2 were not mercury resistant, while all the others had resistance levels similar to or higher than the inoculant strain. 相似文献
20.
The effect of mercury salts on 200 hospital strains of Staph. pyogenes was investigated. Two methods of performing the mercury inhibition test were compared, and the agar plate technique was found to be the more practical. An attempt was made to correlate the results of the test with antibiotic sensitivity tests, phage patterns and virulence tests. Resistance to mercury was found to be associated with antibiotic resistance, and the majority of the resistant strains were found in the lytic group III. No difference in virulence between mercury-resistant and mercury-sensitive strains could be demonstrated by intracerebral inoculation of mice. The mercury inhibition test may be useful as a screening test for “hospital staphylococci”. 相似文献