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Journal ArticleDOI

Phosphate uptake and release by Acinetobacter johnsonii in continuous culture and coupling of phosphate release to heavy metal accumulation.

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TLDR
Increased anaerobic acetate uptake was observed during recycle, which was sustained when the system was returned to flow-through mode and was related to increased cellular lipid inclusions by flow cytometry and electron microscopy, which may represent adaptation of cells to aerobic–anaerobic cycling with aerobic carbon/energy limitation.
Abstract
A strain of polyphosphate-synthesizing, phosphate-releasing Acinetobacter johnsonii was isolated from a wastewater treatment plant operating enhanced biological phosphate removal (EBPR) and was used to remove La(3+) from solution via precipitation of cell-bound LaPO(4). The effect of repeated aerobic-anaerobic cycles on the carbon and phosphate metabolism of the organism was studied in attempts to promote increased phosphate flux using a three-stage, continuous bioreactor comprising aerobic, anaerobic and settling vessels. The bioreactor was operated in two modes: In flow-through mode, cells were grown aerobically with acetate as the sole carbon source, promoting excess phosphate uptake (up to 5.0 mmol/l=3.0 mmol/g protein). Cells were diluted into the anaerobic vessel where phosphate was released (up to 1.0 mmol/l=0.3 mmol/g protein), and thence to waste. The system was initially operated to steady state in flow-through mode, then switched to recycle mode. Here the anaerobic vessel output passed to a settling vessel from which settled cells were returned to the aerobic vessel. Carbon source (acetate) was supplied only to the anaerobic vessel; increased anaerobic acetate uptake was observed during recycle, which was sustained when the system was returned to flow-through mode and was related to increased cellular lipid inclusions by flow cytometry and electron microscopy. These phenomena may represent adaptation of cells to aerobic-anaerobic cycling with aerobic carbon/energy limitation. Addition of La(3+) to the anaerobic vessel during recycle mode promoted removal of 95% of the La(3+) from a 0.1 to 0.3 mM (14-42 ppm) solution at the expense of biogenic phosphate.

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Metals, minerals and microbes: geomicrobiology and bioremediation

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Recent advances in removing phosphorus from wastewater and its future use as fertilizer (1997-2003).

TL;DR: This comprehensive review summarizes the current status in phosphorus-removal technologies from the most common approaches, like metal precipitation, constructed wetland systems, adsorption by various microorganisms either in a free state or immobilized in polysaccharide gels, to enhanced biological phosphorus removal using activated sludge systems, and several innovative engineering solutions.
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Complexation of Uranium by Cells and S-Layer Sheets of Bacillus sphaericus JG-A12

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Metabolically active microbial communities in uranium‐contaminated subsurface sediments

TL;DR: This study provides the first detailed analysis of total and metabolically active microbial communities in radionuclide-contaminated subsurface sediments and points to several groups of nitrate-reducers that appear to be well adapted to environmental conditions common to radion Euclide- Contaminated sites.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

THE USE OF LEAD CITRATE AT HIGH pH AS AN ELECTRON-OPAQUE STAIN IN ELECTRON MICROSCOPY

TL;DR: The stain reported here differs from previous alkaline lead stains in that the chelating agent, citrate, is in sufficient excess to sequester all lead present, and is less likely to contaminate sections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nile red: a selective fluorescent stain for intracellular lipid droplets.

TL;DR: The dye nile red, 9-diethylamino-5H- benzo[alpha]phenoxazine-5-one, is an excellent vital stain for the detection of intracellular lipid droplets by fluorescence microscopy and flow cytofluorometry and it exhibits properties of a near-ideal lysochrome.
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Development of an rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probe specific for the genus Acinetobacter and its application for in situ monitoring in activated sludge.

TL;DR: In this article, a genus-specific 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probe was developed to investigate the role of Acinetobacter spp. in anaerobic and aerobic compartments of a sewage treatment plant with enhanced biological phosphate removal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inorganic Polyphosphate: Toward Making a Forgotten Polymer Unforgettable

TL;DR: It would be surprising if some of the variety of poly P functions observed in microorganisms did not apply to aspects of human growth and development, such as aging and the aberrations of disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polyphosphate-accumulating bacteria from sewage plants with different proceses for biological phosphorus removal

TL;DR: Activated sludge samples from pilot plants using different processes for enhanced biological phosphorus removal were investigated for the occurrence of polyphosphate-accumulating bacteria, and all samples showed a direct correlation between the relative number of phosphate-accUMulating bacteria and phosphate uptake.
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