Transcript Slide 1
IN THE NAME OF GOD
University of Esfahan
Department of Biology
Microbial Biotechnology
Professor Nahvi
Semester (II): 1386 – 87
Mineral Biotechnology
Keivan Beheshti Maal
May 2008
List of contents
History of mineral biotechnology
Bioremediation
Bioremediation removable materials
In situ bioremediation
Transformation of Heavy Metals
Source of heavy metals
Heavy metal environmental and economical impact
Microbe – heavy metal interactions
Bioleaching
Biosorption
Enzymatic transformation
Biomineralization
Nuclear wastes
History of mineral biotechnology
1954: Bryner, Oxidation of Iron pyrites and
copper sulphide could by Thiobacillus spp.
1958: Zimmerley, the first patent for mineral
biotechnology
1983: Groudev, remove of iron and silica from
sands and bauxite ores by bacteria and fungi
1993: Ohmura, pyrite extraction by several
bacteria
1997: Miller, use of mixed mesophilic bacteria
for bioleaching plants
2001: Suzuki, Successful commercial metalleaching processes
(extraction of gold, copper & uranium)
Bioremediation
Bioremediation is reclaiming or cleaning of
contaminated sites using microbes or other
organisms
This entails the removal, degradation, or
sequestering of pollutants & toxic wastes
Bioremediation removable materials
Oil spills
Waste water
Plastics
Chemicals
Toxic Metals
Oil / Wastewater Cleanup
In situ bioremediation
Transformation of Heavy Metals
Heavy Metals are toxic to life
Disease Causing (i.e cancer)
To alleviate man’s past mistakes
Help Conserve habitable environment
Ran out of Hole to dig for storage
Contamination of water supply
Sources of heavy metals in waste
Mining
Tailings
Lead
Plastics, fishing tools, batteries, cable sheeting
Mercury
Measurement and control devices
Chromium
Wood preservatives and pigments
Nuclear Waste
Heavy metals environmental impacts
Lead
Humans, slows nervous system
Toxic to plant life
Mercury
Consumed in Fish Products, affects organs
Cadmium
Accumulates in kidneys
Chromium
Considered most toxic
Heavy metals economical impacts
Estimates of the current US market for
metal bioremediation ~ 200 B$ / year
The market for the clean-up of radioactive
contamination ~ 140 B$ / year (2004)
Current Techniques for Decontamination
Ion exchange
Electrodialysis
Extraction Wells
Metal-microbe interactions
Bioleaching
Biosorption
Enzymatic
Transformations
Biomineralization
Metal – microbe interactions
Microbe assistance in mining for years
Low-grade ore and mine tailings are exploited
biologically
Zinc, copper, nickel, cobalt, iron, tungsten, lead
(sulfide: water insoluble)
Conversion of sulfide to sulfate by M.O
Leach out of the sulfates from ore / extraction
Cu2S not soluble
CuSO4 is soluble
Metal – microbe interactions
Bioleaching:
conversion of insoluble metals to solubilize
metal by microorganisms
Adventages:
- More cost effective
- Low energy usage
- Good function of M.O at low metal concentration
- Harmless emissions
- Reduced pollution in wastes
Metal – microbe interactions
Important mineral-decomposing M.Os:
1) Iron - oxidizing chemolithotrophs
2) Sulphur oxidizing chemolithotrophs
E source: inorganic chemicals
C source: CO2
(hydrogen, sulphur, iron-reducing bacteria / archaea)
Metal-leaching microorganisms:
use ferrous iron and reduced sulphur
compounds as electron donors / CO2 fixation
Produce sulphuric acid (acidophiles)
Organism
Metabolism
obt pH
2.4
28-35
T. prosperus
Anaerobe/
Fe/acid
Halotolerant/
Fe/acid
2.5
30
Leptospirillum ferrooxidans
Fe only
2.5-3.0
30
Sulfobacillus acidophilus
Fe/acid
----
50
S. thermosulfidooxidans
Fe/acid
----
50
L. thermoferrooxidans
Fe
2.5-3.0
40-50
Acidianus brierleyi
Acid
1.5-3.0
45-75
A. infernus
Acid
1.5-3.0
45-75
A. ambivalens
Acid
1.5-3.0
45-75
Sulfurococcus yellowstonii
Fe/acid
----
60-75
T. thiooxidans
Acid
-----
25-40
T. acidophilus
Acid
3.0
25-30
T. caldus
Acid
-----
40-60
Fe/acid
-----
55-85
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans
T range (°C)
Sulfolobus solfataricus
(Archaean)
S. rivotincti
(Archaean)
Fe/acid
2.0
69
S. yellowstonii
(Archaean)
Fe/acid
-----
55-85
Thiobacillus - SRBs
Highly specialized autotrophic bacterium
Acidophile
Iron oxidizer
Fe2+ Fe3+ + e Electron acceptor: O2
Versatile: oxidizes sulfur, iron, copper…..
oxidation of S0 generates sulfuric acid
SRBs:
Combined with Thiobacillus
2nd step: reverses metal mobilization
Form insoluble metal sulfides
Acid-mine drainage cleanup
Commercial Bioleaching Tanks
Biosorption
Metabolism-independent sorption of heavy
metals to biomass
Negative charge at cell surface / metalbinding proteins
Low cost
Molecular biology tools:
targeting engineered metal-binding proteins to
cell surface
Enzyme-Catalyzed Transformations
Using enzymes from microorganisms to help
treat metal contamination
Examples:
Metal precipitation
Redox transformations
Useing high valence metals as electron acceptors
(Fe3+, Mn4+, U6+, Cr6+, Se6+, As5+)
Metal immobilization
(c-type cytochromes)
Geobacter and Desulfovibrio
Geobacter
Anaerobic
Subsurface iron reducer
Reduces Fe3+ to Fe2+
Forms insoluble iron oxides
Reduction of Uranium
Electron donor: acetate
c3 cytochrome: U(VI) reductase
Uranium precipitated outside cell and in periplasm
Desulfovibrio
Sulfate reducer
Reduction of uranium
c3 cytochrome: U(VI) reductase
Extracellular precipitation of uraninite (UO2)
Reduction of chromate
Again c3 cytochrome = Cr(VI) reductase
Biomineralization
Complete biodegradation of organic materials into
inorganic constituents:
CO2 or H20
SRBs
Citrobacter
Pseudomonas
Biomineralization
Iron-reducing bacteria
Ex: Tc(VII) reduced abiotically by magnetite
(Precipitation of TcO2 by SRBs)
Combined with Thiobacillus
(Precipitation of Hg, Cr, U)
Citrobacter
Phosphate
Degradation of glycerol 2-phosphate
phosphatase enzyme
Concentration of metal phosphates at cell surface
(Precipitation of uranium and cadmium)
Biomineralization
Pseudomonas fluorescens
Chromate
constitutive, membrane-associated metalloenzyme
Tin (Sn)
Secretion of soluble extracellular compound
Pseudomonas syringae
Copper
periplasmic copper-binding proteins
Nuclear Waste
Current Treatment only by decay
Storage Site away from civilization for Decay
Leaking by Solublization into water
Making heavy metals into insoluble form
Bacteria precipitation of heavy metals
Oxidized to a Reduced Form (less reactive)
[Uranium (Vi), Cr (VI) To U (IV) , Cr (III)]
Indirect Reduction SO42- to H2S Reduction of radioactive metal to insoluble state by
H2S Toxic effects low rate of bioremdiation in M.O
Radio active contamination effects
Nuclear waste
120 sites in 36 states that
contain nuclear waste
475 billion gallons of
contaminated groundwater
75 million cubic meters of
contaminated sediment
3 million cubic meters of
leaking waste
RA elements half-life
Radioactive element
Half life (years)
Sr – 90 -------------------- 28
Cs – 137 -------------------- 30
Pu – 239 -------------------- 24100
Tc – 97 -------------------- 2.6 M
U – 238 ------------------- 4.5 B
U – 235 ------------------- 7.13 M
Genetically Engineered Microbes
Deinococcus radiodurans
Radiation Resistant
(up to 1.5 million rads)
Bacillus infernos
High temperature resistant
Methanococcus jannaschii
Pressure resistant (up to 230 atm)
Treatable Heavy Metals
Toxic Metals
Uranium
Chromium
Selenium
Lead (Pb)
Technetium
Mercury
Other Metals
Vanadium
Molybdenum
Copper
Gold
Silver
Factors to be Considered
Bioethics regarding Genetic Engineered
Microbes
Bioethics of Ecological Damage Control
Cost / Tax Money
Duration of Treatment to be effective
Have a nice time
Bioremediation of the Alaska shorelines