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Abstract
A newly isolated ureolytic bacteria, Brucella intermedia TSBOI, exhibited microbially induced calcite precipitation (MICP) which is a promising technique for the remediation of heavy metals in polluted environments. Brucella intermedia TSBOI achieved 90–100% removal of 1 mmol/L Cu2+/Pb2+/Zn2+ within 72 h. A distinctive feature lies in B. intermedia TSBOI's capacity for the transport and hydrolysis of urea, considered to be critical for its strong urease activity. This study explored the mechanisms of this capacity at the genetic, molecular and protein levels through complete genome sequencing, molecular docking and enzymatic reaction kinetics. The results revealed that, for urea hydrolysis, B. intermedia TSBOI exhibited a comprehensive urease gene cluster, with the key gene ureC demonstrating an absolute expression level approximating to 4 × 104 copies/RNA ng under optimal conditions. Results also confirmed the strong spontaneous, energy-independent binding ability of it's urease to urea, with the lowest Gibbs free energy binding site linking to the three amino acids, alanine, asparagine and serine. The urea transport gene yut presented and expressed, with the absolute expression enhanced in response to increasing urea concentrations. The significant positive correlation between ureC/yut expression levels and urease activity provided a theoretical basis for B. intermedia TSBOI's heavy metal bioremediation potential. Environmental Implication: Heavy metals (Cu, Pb and Zn) were studied in this study. Heavy metals are hazardous due to their toxicity, persistence, and ability to bioaccumulate in living organisms. They can cause severe health issues, harm ecosystems, and contaminate air, water, and soil. A novel ureolytic bacteria, Brucella intermedia TSBOI, exhibited microbially induced carbonate precipitation capability was isolated which removed 90–100% of 1 mmol/L Cu2+/Pb2+/Zn2+ within 72 h. Its advantages in urea hydrolysis and transport facilitate the remediation of actual heavy metal contaminated environments.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 134049 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Journal of Hazardous Materials |
Volume | 469 |
Early online date | 24 Mar 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 5 May 2024 |
Keywords
- Comparative genomics
- Molecular docking
- RT-qPCR
- Urea transporter
- ureC expression
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- 1 Finished
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INSITE with Essex - David Pateron: Functionality and Ecological Connectivity of Man-Made Structures (FuECoMMS)
Paterson, D. (PI)
12/08/20 → 11/08/23
Project: Standard