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Single-step production of a recyclable nanobiocatalyst for organophosphate pesticides biodegradation using functionalized bacterial magnetosomes.

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TLDR
The easy production of functionalized magnetic nanoparticles with suitably genetically modified magnetotactic bacteria that are efficient as a reusable nanobiocatalyst for pesticides bioremediation in contaminated effluents is demonstrated.
Abstract
Enzymes are versatile catalysts in laboratories and on an industrial scale; improving their immobilization would be beneficial to broadening their applicability and ensuring their (re)use. Lipid-coated nano-magnets produced by magnetotactic bacteria are suitable for a universally applicable single-step method of enzyme immobilization. By genetically functionalizing the membrane surrounding these magnetite particles with a phosphohydrolase, we engineered an easy-to-purify, robust and recyclable biocatalyst to degrade ethyl-paraoxon, a commonly used pesticide. For this, we genetically fused the opd gene from Flavobacterium sp. ATCC 27551 encoding a paraoxonase to mamC, an abundant protein of the magnetosome membrane in Magnetospirillum magneticum AMB-1. The MamC protein acts as an anchor for the paraoxonase to the magnetosome surface, thus producing magnetic nanoparticles displaying phosphohydrolase activity. Magnetosomes functionalized with Opd were easily recovered from genetically modified AMB-1 cells: after cellular disruption with a French press, the magnetic nanoparticles are purified using a commercially available magnetic separation system. The catalytic properties of the immobilized Opd were measured on ethyl-paraoxon hydrolysis: they are comparable with the purified enzyme, with Km (and kcat) values of 58 µM (and 178 s−1) and 43 µM (and 314 s−1) for the immobilized and purified enzyme respectively. The Opd, a metalloenzyme requiring a zinc cofactor, is thus properly matured in AMB-1. The recycling of the functionalized magnetosomes was investigated and their catalytic activity proved to be stable over repeated use for pesticide degradation. In this study, we demonstrate the easy production of functionalized magnetic nanoparticles with suitably genetically modified magnetotactic bacteria that are efficient as a reusable nanobiocatalyst for pesticides bioremediation in contaminated effluents.

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Soil enzymes in a changing environment: Current knowledge and future directions

TL;DR: The collective vision of the future of extracellular enzyme research is offered: one that will depend on imaginative thinking as well as technological advances, and be built upon synergies between diverse disciplines.
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Potential applications of enzymes immobilized on/in nano materials: A review

TL;DR: N nanoparticle-based immobilization of enzymes showed a broader working pH and temperature range and higher thermal stability than the native enzymes, and it is possible that co-immobilization of multi-enzymes could be achieved on these nanoparticles.
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Magnetosome biogenesis in magnetotactic bacteria

TL;DR: This Review discusses the diverse properties of magnetosome biogenesis in other species of magnetotactic bacteria and considers the value of genetically 'magnetizing' non-magnetotacticacteria.
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Magnetite Biomineralization in Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense: Time-Resolved Magnetic and Structural Studies

TL;DR: The combination of magnetic and structural studies by means of Fe K-edge X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy has identified and quantified two phases of Fe involved in the biomineralization process, confirming the role of ferrihydrite as the source of Fe ions for magnetite biominalization in M. gryphiswaldense.
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Targeted thermal therapy with genetically engineered magnetite magnetosomes@RGD: Photothermia is far more efficient than magnetic hyperthermia

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that targeted magnetic nanoparticles could generate heat on a therapeutic level after systemic administration, but only under laser excitation, and successfully inhibit tumor progression.
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Four new derivatives of the broad-host-range cloning vector pBBR1MCS, carrying different antibiotic-resistance cassettes.

TL;DR: In this paper, four new antibiotic-resistant derivatives of the broad-host-range (bhr) cloning vector pBBR1MCS have been constructed, which are relatively small (< 5.3 kb), possess an extended multiple cloning site (MCS), and allow direct selection of recombinant plasmid molecules in Escherichia coli via disruption of the LacZ alpha peptide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetosome formation in prokaryotes

TL;DR: Progress has been made in elucidating the molecular, biochemical, chemical and genetic bases of magnetosome formation and understanding how these unique intracellular organelles function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanobiocatalysis and Its Potential Applications

TL;DR: Recent developments in nanobiocatalysis are described and their potential applications in various fields, such as trypsin digestion in proteomic analysis, antifouling, and biofuel cells are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review on the use of enzymes for the detection of organochlorine, organophosphate and carbamate pesticides in the environment.

TL;DR: Enzymatic methods of detection of pesticides can serve as a tool for screening large samples which can be followed up with the more traditional chromatographic methods of analysis.
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