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EnE 317

This document discusses biotechnology and its environmental applications. It defines biotechnology as using organisms or their components in industrial processes, which can be aided by genetic manipulation. Environmental biotechnology aims to remediate contamination, reduce pollution from current activities, and control pollution. This is achieved by enhancing existing biological systems or altering them to achieve desired outcomes. The document also discusses classifying pollution and different types of pollutants.

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Lianne Peñalosa
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
20 views13 pages

EnE 317

This document discusses biotechnology and its environmental applications. It defines biotechnology as using organisms or their components in industrial processes, which can be aided by genetic manipulation. Environmental biotechnology aims to remediate contamination, reduce pollution from current activities, and control pollution. This is achieved by enhancing existing biological systems or altering them to achieve desired outcomes. The document also discusses classifying pollution and different types of pollutants.

Uploaded by

Lianne Peñalosa
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

The variety of organisms that may play a part in the

MODULE 1: INTRODUCTION OF BIOTECHNOLOGY


environmental application of biotechnology is huge:
• Ranging from microbe through to trees, and;
WHAT IS BIOTECHNOLOGY?
• All are utilized on one of the same three (3)
 – the use of organisms or their components fundamental bases;
in industrial or commercial processes, which can be aided by the
techniques of genetic manipulation in developing, e.g., novel For the vast majority of cases, it is the former approach,
plants for agriculture and industry. (Chamber of Science and accepting and making use of existing species in their natural,
Technology Dictionary) unmodified form, which predominates.
 While the agricultural, industrial, and environmental applications
of biotechnology are potentially very great, the shadow of
has often cost across them. SCOPE FOR USE: THE THREE INTERVENTION POINTS
 may be relatively commonplace in
pharmaceutical thinking and yet in other spheres like agriculture,
e.g. society can so readily and thoroughly demonize it.
 “On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection”
by Charles Darwin (1859).
 Their contribution was to view evolution as the driving force of
life, with successive selective pressures over time endowing living
beings with optimized characteristics for survival. (w/ Alfred
Russel Wallace- presented to the Linnaean Society, 1858).
 “sees the interplay of mutation and DEFINITION
natural selection as fundamental.”  “the development,
 Darwin – rejects “mutation” and somewhat supported the use, and regulation of biological systems for remediation of
of biological progression. contaminated environments (land, air, water), for environment-
 Physical changes in an organism’s lifetime were thought to shape friendly processes (green manufacturing technologies and
future generations. sustainable development). – THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF
 In , the first patent for a relating to a strain of BIOTECHNOLOGY

(engineered to express the genes of certain enzymes to


POLLUTION AND POLLUTION CONTROL
metabolize crude oil).
 – US general electric. • Pollution has become the favorite topic of all environmental
 In 1992, the first working draft of the human genome sequence problems but also the least understood.
was published. • Not all pollutants are manufacture or synthetic; many substances
 Full genetic blueprint of the fruit fly: Drosophila melanogaster. may contribute to pollution.
• Any biologically active substance has the potential to give rise to
pollution effect.
• Consequence: hard to classify pollutants: broad spectrum.

DEFINITION

The UK Environmental Protection Act (EPA) 1990 statutorily offers the


following:
WHERE IS ENVIRONMENTAL BIOTECHNOLOGY? • Pollution of the environment means pollution of the environment
due to the release (into any environmental medium) from any
• Pharmaceutical biotechnology – glamorous end of the
process of substances which are capable of causing harm to man
market. or any other living organisms supported by the environment. –
• “environmental applications” are considered secondary EPA, INTRODUCTION
options. • …… the escape of any substances capable of causing har to
• Environmental biotechnology is fundamentally rooted in waste. man or any other living organism supported by the environment.
• Typically, being concerned with the remediation of contamination – EPA, SECTION 29, PART 2
caused by previous use, the impact reduction of current activity, • “In essence, then, pollution is the introduction of substances into
or the control of pollution. the environment which, by virtue of their characteristics,
• Thus, the principal aims of this field: persistence or the quantities involved, are likely to be damaging
o The manufacture of products in environmentally to the health of humans, other animals, and plants, or otherwise
harmonious ways, which allow for the minimization of compromise that environment’s ability to sustain life.”
harmful solid, liquids, or gaseous outputs. • is defined as “the
o The clean-up of the residual effects of earlier human contamination of the physical and biological components of the
occupation. earth/atmosphere system to such an extent that normal
environmental processes are adversely affected. -
HOW ACHIEVED? Environmental Management, 2017
• "Pollution" means any alteration of the physical, chemical, and
Two folds: biological properties of any water, air and/or land resources of
the Philippines, or any discharge thereto of any liquid, gaseous
• Enhance or optimize conditions for existing biological or solid wastes as will or is likely to create or to render such
systems. water, air and land resources harmful, detrimental or injurious to
• Alterations (of bio-systems) to bring about the desired public health, safety or welfare or which will adversely affect
outcome.
1|Page
their utilization for domestic, commercial, industrial, agricultural,
recreational or other legitimate purposes.” - (PD 984 – Pollution
Control Law)

CLASSIFYING POLLUTION

Ionising
Radiation

ENERGY Heat

Noise
CLASSIFICATION

CFCs
POLLUTANT

TOXIC BIOFILTERS
DDT
Artificial
Plastics
NUISANCE
Glass
CHEMICAL
CO2
ESSENTIAL
Nitrates
Naturally
occuring
Lead
INESSENTIAL
Copper
BIOTRICKLING FILTERS

FACTORS CONSIDERED IN EVALUATING POLLIUTION EFFECTS

• toxicity – related to pollutant’s concentration and time of


exposure
• persistence – duration of effect
• mobility – tendency to disperse or dilute
• ease of control – pollutant handling
• bioaccumulation – getting concentrated in living tissues
• chemistry – how the pollutant reacts with other substances

THE POLLUTION ENVIRONMENT

 There is sometimes a tendency for contamination to be considered


somewhat simplistically, in isolation from its context.
BIOSCRUBBERS
 It is important to remember that pollution cannot properly be
assessed without a linked examination of the environment in which
it occurs.
 The more stable and robust the environmental system affected,
the less damage a given pollution event will inflict, and clearly,
fragile ecosystems or sensitive habitats are most at risk.

 It should be obvious that, in general terms, the post-pollution


survival of a given environment depends on the maintenance of
its natural cycles.

 – involve attenuation of
pollutants by permitting them to become physically spread out,
thereby reducing their effective point concentration.
 – an attempt to
gather together substances and prevent their escape into the
surrounding environment.

TWO MAIN MECHANISMS


OTHER OPTIONS:
 – contaminant combining with cellular constituents or
enzymes preventing their function. • Adsorption – use of adsorbing agents
• Incineration – oxidation at high temperature
 – damage is done by secondary action resulting from
• Ozonation – use of ozone to oxidize some contaminants
their presence

ADVANTAGES OF BIOTECHNOLOGICAL APPROACHES:


APPLICATION TO POLLUTION CONTROL
• Competitive capital costs
• Low running costs

2|Page
• Low maintenance costs • CYTOPLASM comprises most of the inside of the cell. It contains
• Low noise water and the macromolecules that the cell needs to function.
• No carbon monoxide production • CHROMOSOME stores the genetic code for the cell’s heredity and
• Avoids high-temperature requirement or explosion risk biochemical functions.
• Safe processes with a highly “green” profile • RIBOSOMES convert the genetic code into working catalysts that
• Robust and tolerant of fluctuation carry out the cell’s reactions.
• ENZYMES are the catalysts that carry out the desired biochemical
CLEAN TECHNOLOGY reactions.
• The mechanisms by which pollution or waste may be reduced
at the source are varied. They may involve changes in
technology or processes, alteration in the raw materials used,
or a complete restructuring of procedures. Generally MAJOR DOMAINS OF ORGANISMS
speaking, biotechnological interventions are principally
limited to the former aspects, though they may also prove
instrumental in permitting procedural change.

CATEGORIES

• – replacement of chemical methods


with those of microbial or enzyme action
• – replacement in the use of
chemicals by biological agents
• – using suitable, less harmful
alternatives for polluting substances or materials.

MODULE 2: MICROBIOLO GY
OUTLINE
It shows that three major domains comprise all organisms.
1. The Cell
2. Major Domains of Organisms  The Bacteria and the Archaea domains contain the prokaryotes,
3. Bacteria (Prokaryotes) or cells that do not contain their chromosome inside a nucleus.
4. Archaea (Prokaryotes)  The organisms within these two major domains are single-cellular
5. Eukarya (Eukaryotes) because they are complete living entities that consist of only one
6. Fungi, Algae, Protozoa cell.
7. Viruses  The other major domain is the Eukarya, which comprises
organisms that may be single-cellular or multicellular and have
BASICS OF MICROBIOLOGY their chromosomes inside a nucleus. All higher plants and animals
belong to the Eukarya domain.
THE CELL PROKARYOTES
A cell is the fundamental building block of life.
Cells that do not contain their chromosomes inside a nucleus (single-
A cell is an entity that is separate from other cells and its environment. celled).

As a living entity, a cell is a complex chemical system that can be


distinguished from nonliving entities in four critical ways.

• CELLS are capable of growth and reproduction; that is, they can
self-produce another entity essentially identical to themselves.
• CELLS are highly organized and selectively restrict what crosses
their boundaries. Thus, cells are at low entropy compared to their
environment.
• CELLS are composed of major elements (C, N, O, and S, in
particular) that are chemically reduced. • BACTERIA AND ARCHAEA – are considered to be in the same
• CELLS are self-feeding. They take up necessary elements, group, their similarities are greater than their differences.
electrons, and energy from their external environment to create o – single-celled organisms that behaved like
and maintain themselves as reproducing, organized, and reduced plants (they have chlorophyll)
entities. o – photosynthetic prokaryotes
(has no nucleus - a property of bacteria, not plants) now
ESSENTIAL COMPONENTS OF CELLS classified as cyanobacteria.

• CELL MEMBRANE is a barrier between the cell and its environment. and algae are commonly found together in
It is the vehicle for restricting what crosses its boundaries, and it natural waters and tend to compete for the same energy and carbon
is the location of reactions that the cell needs to conduct just resources.
outside itself.
are a pesky group of phototrophs that cause
• CELL WALL is the structural member that confers rigidity to the
many water quality problems, from tastes and odors in drinking water to
cell and protects the membrane.
the production of toxins that kill cows and other ruminants that may
consume them while drinking from highly infested surface waters.
3|Page
EUKARYOTES SCANNING ELECTRON MICROPHOTOGRAPHS OF TYPICAL

Cells that have their chromosome inside a nucleus (single or multicellular).

BACTERIA
DIFFERING FEATURES AMONG BACTERIA, ARCHAEA, AND
EUKARYA a) Staphylococcus epidermidis
b) Escherichia coli
C H ARACTERISTICS B ACTERIA A R CHAEA E U KARYA c) Bacillus chains
Membrane-enclosed nucleus Absent Absent Present d) Leptospyra interrogans
Cell wall Murami Murami Murami
c acid c acid c acid CHEMICAL AND MACROMOLECULAR CHARACTERISTICS OF
present absent absent PROKARYOTIC CELLS
Chlorophyll-based Yes No Yes CHEMICAL COMPOSITION
photosynthesis
Constituents Percentage
Methanogenesis No Yes No
Reduction of S to H2S Yes Yes No
Nitrification Yes No No Organic 90
Denitrification Yes Yes No C 45-55
O 22-28
Nitrogen fixation Yes Yes No
H 5-7
Synthesis of poly-- Yes Yes No
N 8-13
hydroxyalkanoate carbon
Inorganic 10
storage granules
P 2O 5 50
Sensitivity to chloramphenicol, Yes No No
K 2O 6.5
streptomycin, and kanamycin
Na2O 10
Ribosome sensitivity to No Yes Yes
MgO 8.5
diphtheria toxin
Table 1: Madigan, Martinko, and Parker, 1997. CaO 10
SO3 15
TYPICAL MORPHOLOGIES OF BACTERIA

MACROMOLECULAR COMPOSITION E. coli & S. typhimuriumn

Percentage Percentage Molecule per cell


b

Total 100 100 24,610,000


Proteins 50-60 55 2,350,000
Carbohydrates 10-15 7
Lipids 6-8 9.1 22,000,000
Nucleic acids
DNA 3 3.1 2.1
RNA 15-20 20.5 255,500

4|Page
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE 12 PHYLOGENIC LINEAGES OF BACTERIAL CELLS ARE USUALLY ROD-SHAPED, MEASURING
APPROXIMATELY 1 MICRON IN WIDTH AND 2 MICRONS IN
BACTERIA
LENGTH.
Phylogenetic lineages (based on rRNA sequencing) and phenotypic
properties based on the energy source.

– a bag,
bounded by a membrane, containing an
aqueous solution.

• SURVIVAL REQUIRES – cell growth, replication of the DNA,


and then division.
• Under ideal conditions of the environment and food supply,
division (of some bacteria) may occur every 20min some longer.

• OTHER FORMS OF REPLICATION:


▪ budding off
▪ spore development

ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS FOR GROWTH


MAJOR GROUPINGS AMONG THE PURPLE BACTERIA AND THE
COMMON GENERA FOR EACH GROUP
1. TEMPERATURE
Bacteria can be classified into four different groups based on their
normal temperature range for growth:

Temperature Class Normal Temperature Range for


Growth (◦C)
Psychrophile -5 to 20
Mesophile 8 to 45
Thermophile 40 to 70
Hyperthermophile 65 to 110

BACTERIA GROUPS: ELECTRON ACCEPTOR IN ENERGY


METABOLISM

• DELTA GROUP- sulfate


• ALPHA, BETA, GAMMA GROUPS – oxygen or nitrate
• GAMMA GROUP - oxidize reduced compounds of sulfur, involved in
such problems as acid mine drainage and concrete corrosion.

• Such organisms are also of importance to environmental


biotechnology. Thus, for various reasons, the purple bacteria are
of great interest to us.
Effect of temperature on growth rate of different temperature
classes of bacteria
MICROBES AND METABOLISM
2. PH
Fundamental concepts:
• Most species of bacteria also have a narrow pH range for
1. Cell Growth growth, and for most organisms, range lies between 6 and 8.
2. Metabolic capability

Routes of Material removed: • For some species, the operating range is quite broad, while for
1. Degradation others, it can be quite narrow.
2. Immobilization
• that oxidize sulfur or iron for energy,
MICROBES thrive best under highly acidic conditions = enhances their chance
for SURVIVAL.
• Cannot be seen by the naked eye
• Many are bacteria or archaea  SULFURIC ACID – end-product of their energy
• All are prokaryotes metabolism.
• Some are eukaryotes (yeasts, protozoa, unicellular plants) • OPTIMUM pH CONDITIONS - The design and operation of a
treatment system must consider the optimum pH conditions
required for the growth of the bacteria of interest.

5|Page
3. OXYGEN PARTIAL PRESSURE • is achieved by metabolic pathways operating
within an organism or combination of organisms, sometimes
described as consortia.
• These processes are the crux of environmental biotechnology.
4. OSMOTIC PRESSURE
“Crux” means difficult or unsolved problem.
• Such activity operates through metabolic pathways functioning
within the cell, or by enzymes either excreted by the cell or,
BACTERIAL SPECIES GROWTH RELATIVE TO OXYGEN
isolated and applied in a purified form.
1. – requires the presence of molecular • , which refers to the removal of
oxygen. contaminants, typically metals, utilizing adsorption or
2. – can live in the absence of bioaccumulation by various microorganisms or plant species.
molecular oxygen. • can be achieved by chemicals excreted by
3. – can live either with or without an organism or by chemicals in the neighboring environment which
the presence of oxygen. trap or chelate a molecule thus making it insoluble. Since virtually
all biological processes require the substrate to be dissolved in
FINER CLASSIFICATION water, chelation renders the substance unavailable.

• – intolerant of oxygen. GLYCOLYSIS, THE TCA, AND GLYOXALATE CYCLES


• – tolerant with oxygen
and grows in its presence.
• – prefer oxygen but survive even
without it.
• – grow in the presence of minute
quantities of oxygen.

TOLERANCE TO SALT

• – grow best under salt conditions similar to


seawater (about 3.5% NaCl)
• – live well in a saturated NaCl
solution (15-30%)

ENERGY AND CARBON-SOURCE CLASSES OF BACTERIA

PHOTOTROPHS
- Use energy from light.

TYPES OF PHOTOTROPHS

• – use water and convert it


photochemically into oxygen and hydrogen.
• – generally live
without the presence of oxygen; extract electrons from H2S
• GLYCOLYSIS – conversion of the 6-carbon phosphorylated sugar,
or elemental sulfur, H2, or organic compounds such as
glucose 6-phosphate, to the 3-carbon organic acid, organic acid,
succinate or butyrate.
pyruvic acid, and can be viewed as pivotal in central metabolism.
• PYRUVATE - may enter in various pathways determined by the
energy and synthetic needs of the cell that time. It can continue
CHEMOTROPHS into the TCA cycle, whose;
- Obtain energy from chemical reactions.
MAIN FUNCTION – produce and receive metabolic
TYPES OF CHEMOTROPHS intermediates and to produce energy, or into one of the
many fermentation routes.
• – use organic chemicals for
energy. • GLUCONEOGENESIS – related pathway, sharing some but not all of
• – use inorganic chemicals for the reactions of glycolysis and which operates in the opposite
energy. direction.

BACTERIAL CLASSES RELATED TO CARBON SOURCE ARCHAEA

• – use inorganic carbon. Such as CO2 for cell • do not contain peptidoglycan (bacteria do).
synthesis. • consist of
• – use organic compounds for cell synthesis. ▪ either-linked molecules,
▪ long-chained, and branched hydrocarbons
METABOLISM (bacteria and eukarya fatty acids connected by
ester linkages and tend to be straight-chained)

6|Page
• are of several types and are
structurally more complex (bacteria is a single type with a simple
quaternary structure)

• SOIL SIGNIFICANT ROLE FUNGI - they are important in the decomposition


of dry organic matter, a process that is used for the stabilization of refuse and
organic sludges from wastewater treatment.
• VERSATILE ABILITY OF FUNGI - for organic destruction would have been
exploited fully for the degradation of toxic compounds, but it has not. This is
MAJOR GROUPS & SUBGROUPS FOR THE ARCHAEA due partly to the slow rate at which fungal decomposition occurs, making fungi
less attractive for engineered systems.
• RELATIVE UNIMPORTANCE OF FUNGI - in detoxification also is due to a
lack of understanding of how best to capture their potential.

3 MAJOR GROUPS OF FUNGI

1. – true fungi
2. – slime molds (have an amoeba-like
motile stage and a fungus-like spore-producing stage)
• – organisms living under extreme
3. – lichens (consists of fungus and alga
environmental conditions.
growing together)
• – contains hyperthermophilic Archaea that
have not yet been obtained in pure culture.
CLASSIFICATION OF THE TRUE FUNGI
• – are present throughout Archaea
• (cell-wall-less Thermoplasma)
• (Euyarchaeota)

EUKARYA

• Fungi, algae, protozoa


• Multicellular microscopic organisms (rotifers, nematodes, other
zooplanktons)

× Ascomycetes
▪ largest class of fungi
▪ 30,000 species
FUNGI ▪ Hyphae are divided by the cross walls or septa
▪ Spore formation – sexual or asexual
▪ Ex. Yeasts in brewing and baking – a source of many antibiotics
▪Common black & blue-green molds
▪ Causative agent of the Dutch elm disease
× Basidiomycetes
▪ Spore-bearing structure
▪ Basidium
▪ Decomposers like mushroom parasitic
× Deuteromycetes
▪ All fungi that do not have a sexual reproduction
are the primary decomposers in the world. The decomposers are ▪ Cheese producers
responsible for the oxidation of dead organic material, which returns the
resulting inorganic elements into the environment to be recycled again by ▪ Antibiotics such as penicillin
other living forms. × Oomycetes
▪ Water molds
TYPICAL MORPHOLOGIES OF FUNGI AND THEIR SPORES. ▪ Only group that has cellulose rather than chitin in the
cell wall
▪ Mostly fish parasites

7|Page
▪ Mildew threated the French wine industry in late ALGAL NUISANCE PROBLEM:
1800s
× Zygomycetes • Too much algal growth causes taste and odor problems in
▪ Produce zygospores for sexual reproduction water supplies;
▪ Primarily terrestrial that live on dead plants and • filter clogging;
animal matter
• decreased clarity in lakes, floating mats interfere with
▪ Some are used in the chemical fermentation industry boating or swimming;
▪ Parasitic • increased sedimentation in lakes and estuaries.

SOME GENERALIZATIONS • Decomposition depletes oxygen resources in water


• During growth, algae consume inorganic minerals in the water,
• Fungi generally have a drier, more acidic environment than bacteria. resulting in chemical changes such as to pH, hardness, and
• Fungi grow slow than bacteria. alkalinity.
• Fungi prefer terrestrial environments and high concentrations of • They also excrete organic materials that stimulate the growth of
organic matter whereas Bacteria prefers aquatic environment. bacteria and associated populations. Some algae produce toxins
• Bacteria and Archaea carry out more complete decomposition of that can kill fish and make shellfish unsafe to eat.
organic material under anaerobic conditions (which are only • Thus, the growth and decay of algae profoundly affect water
tolerated by yeasts. quality.

FORM OR SHAPE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DIFFERENT GROUPS OF ALGAE

• Spherical
• Rod
• Spindle-shaped
• Club-shaped
• May occur as membranous colonies (filaments grouped singly or
in clusters: or in individual strands either branched or unbranched.
• Some are aggregates of single identical cells.

NUTRITIONAL REQUIREM ENTS

• All fungi decompose organic materials for energy


• Most can live on simple sugars such as glucose
• Some can satisfy nitrogen requirements from inorganic sources
– ammonium and nitrate.
• Almost all can satisfy nitrogen needs from organic sources.

CHARACTERISTICS

• Fungi grow slower than bacteria


• Generally, tolerate extreme conditions:
→ Relatively dry climates
Fungi obtain water from the air
→ Molds survive in dry climates
Inhibitory to vegetative bacteria
→ Extremely dry condition
Fungi produce protective spores
→ Molds grow on concentrated sugars with high osmotic
pressure
(a). Major types found in higher plants and algae, cyanobacteria
→ Molds can live under relatively high acidic conditions.
(b). Found in higher plants and green algae
• Optimum pH for growth: about 5.5, but could tolerate between
(c). Found in diatoms, dinoflagellates, and brown algae
2 to 9.
(d). Found only in red algae
• Optimal temperature range for growth: 22 to 30◦C (e). Rare type found in golden algae
• Could cause spoilage (refrigerated condition) near 0◦C
• Some can survive/live with the temperature at 60◦C REPRODUCTION AND GROWTH

ALGAE • Algae reproduce sexually and asexually


• Rapid growth
• Phytoplanktons (free-floating microscopic forms) are major • Most are strictly phototrophs and autotrophs
primary producers of organic matter in natural bodies of water.
• Essential elements for growth – C, H, O, N, P, S, and Fe
• Some species can grow at 0◦C and others at 90◦C
• Being oxygenic phototrophs – the main source of oxygen in
• Prefers neutral to alkaline Ph
natural water bodies.

8|Page
▪ Non-parasitic
▪ Characterized by the presence of cilia
▪ TWO TYPES:
1. FREE-SWIMMING CILATES – moves through
water seeking organic particulate matter.
2. STALKED CILATES – which attached themselves to
large clumps or surfaces with long filaments called
trichocysts (e.g. vorticella)
PROTOZOA •
▪ All are parasites
Protozoa are single-celled, heterotrophic eukaryotes that can pursue and
▪ Usually are not motile
ingest their food.
▪ Don’t digest food
▪ EXAMPLE: Plasmodium vivax – causative agent of malaria

TYPICAL MORPHOLOGIES OF PROTOZOA

• LACK A TRUE CELL WALL and vary from the size of a large
bacterium to an organism that can be seen by the unaided eye.
• Commonly reproduce asexually
o often by mitosis (similar to binary fission in prokaryotes)
• sexual reproduction is also common.
• They generally feed on bacteria and another small organic
particulate matter
• Others function as parasites (dependent on others for nutrients);
can cause disease to humans.
• “polish” effluent in biological streams.
• Indicator of the presence of toxic materials in which many are
quite sensitive.
• Can tolerate pH as low as 3.2 or as high as 8.7; most survive
best at 6-8.
• Optimum temperature between 15 and 25°C
MULTICELLULAR ORGANISMS
• Maxima temperature between 35 and 40°C

Most are aerobic but many flourish in anaerobic environments.

CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DIFFERENT GROUPS OF PROTOZOA


▪ Amoeba-like organisms ▪ ASCHELMINTHES – sac worms e.g. Rotifera & Nematoda
▪ Move and feed by means of a “pseudopod” – false foot- ▪ CRUSTACEA – under phylum Arthropoda
which is the temporary projection of the cytoplasm in the
direction of motion. VIRUSES
▪ EXAMPLE: Entamoeba histolytica (causes amoebic dysentery in
• VIRUSES are generally not considered to be "living" entities, as
humans)
they are unable, on their own, to replace their parts or to carry
out metabolism.

• They can be replicated only when in association with a living cell,
▪ Zooflagellates with one or two flagella
which translates the genetic information present in the virus and
▪ Heterotrophic protozoa
causes its replication.
▪ Most are free living but many are parasites
• However, their great importance to living entities is without
▪ EXAMPLE: Trypanosom gambiense (cause fatal African sleeping question, as they cause disease and death.
sickness) transmitted by tsetse fly • They are submicroscopic genetic elements consisting of nucleic acid
(DNA or RNA) surrounded by proteins.

▪ Ciliates are free-living

9|Page
• When inserted in a host cell, the viral DNA or RNA causes the host A process in which those individuals who are most fit to survive in their
to redirect its metabolic machinery into the production of environment, generate and sustain the greatest number of descendants.
duplicate viral cells.
• When viral number reaches a sufficient size, the host cell dies and NICHE
breaks open, the new virus particles are released to infect new • The selected microorganisms accomplish their primary goal
host cells.
by finding or creating their niche.
• Size: 15 to 300nm
• BACTERIOPHAGE – infects prokaryotic cells Niche – a multidimensional space in which energy supply, nutrients, pH,
temperature, and other conditions allow it to sustain itself and its genetic
TYPICAL STRUCTURES OF VIRUSES heritage.

• The selected microorganisms are the ones best able to


capture the resources available to them.
• Engineers design and operate microbiological processes to
achieve environmental goals and manipulate the environment
so that the most desired microorganisms are selected
• Selection hierarchy according to the substrate
Ø Electron-donor
Ø Electron-acceptor

For example;
• PHAGES are prevalent in biological wastewater treatment systems
and at times have been suspected of causing process upsets by  B I OCHEMICAL O X YGEN D E MAND (B OD) is a measure of organic electron
killing needed bacteria, although this has not been well donors.
documented.
• They may be a factor causing changes the in dominance of one
 To remove BOD from wastewater, heterotrophic bacteria are selected by
bacterial species over another in mixed culture systems, but this supplying them with an appropriate electron acceptor (e.g., 02 or N03) at a rate
aspect of wastewater treatment has not been adequately commensurate with the rate at which the BOD must be removed.
explored.
• A VIRUS INFECTION can occur quite rapidly. Within about 25 min  As long as nutrients are present and the environment is hospitable in terms of
after a bacterium is infected with a phage, about 200 new pH, temperature, and salinity, heterotrophs wil gain energy from the oxidation of
phages can be produced.
BOD and self-select.
• The bacterial cell bursts open, releasing them for infection of
other cells, and the infection can spread at an increasingly rapid • The selection of microorganisms able to utilize an ELECTRON-
rate. DONOR or ELECTRON-ACCEPTOR substrate is straightforward since
the utilization reaction provides the electron and energy flow that
MODULE 3: MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, MICROBES AND THEIR
fuel the growth of the desired microorganism.
METABOLISM
• In a direct competition for an organic electron donor, cells
MICROBIAL ECOLOGY carrying out aerobic respiration gain more energy and have a
• It is the scientific discipline that seeks to understand the growth-rate advantage. Based on energy yield with different
interactions among the different microbial types and their electron acceptors, competitiveness declines in the order
environment. 𝑶𝟐 > 𝑵𝑶−𝟏 𝟑 > 𝑭𝒆
𝟑+ > 𝑺𝑶−𝟐 > 𝑪𝑶
𝟒 𝟐

OUTLINE • : Another important factor that affects selection is the


rate at which a microorganism can consume its electron donor and
1. What microorganisms are present? acceptor. The systematic understanding of rates, called kinetics.
2. What metabolic reactions could the microorganisms carry • KINETICS plays a critical role when different microorganisms
out?
compete for the same resource, such as a common electron donor
3. What reactions are they carrying out?
or acceptor.
4. How are the different microorganisms interacting with each
other and their environment? SELECTION

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY • is not based solely on the consumption of an


electron donor or acceptor. Selection in reactors is also strongly
What microorganisms are present? determined by a microorganism's ability to be retained.

• Community Structure 3 facets: MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES


1. Enumeration of the number of distinct microbial types
• In environmental biotechnology, the microbial communities are
2. Abundance
3. Spatial relationships among the different populations
almost always aggregated in flocs or biofilms. These aggregates
are much more easily retained in the process than individual,
dispersed cells.
MICROBIAL COMMUNITY
• Hence, the ability to form or join into microbial aggregates is
Microorganisms are not the same in terms of biochemical reactions they critical for selection in environmental biotechnologies.
carry out and other phenotypic traits.
• In some cases, a microbial strain achieves its selection advantage
by locating in a favorable location within an aggregate.
SELECTION
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OTHER SELECTION FACTORS:

1. resistance to predation,
2. the ability to sequester and store valuable resources, and
3. the ability to exchange materials with other microorganisms
 Communities in environmental biotechnologies often contain a
significant amount of functional redundancy.
 In other words, the community structure contains several
different strains that can carry out the same biochemical
function.
 For TREATMENT APPLICATIONS, functional redundancy
appears to be an advantage, since system performance
tends to be more stable, even when community structure shifts.
 A concept complementary to redundancy is metabolic
versatility.

EXCHANGE OF MATERIALS STRATEGIES

1. Exchange of substrates EXHIBITS “SYNERGY”


2. Exchange of genetic material
3. Exchange of communication signals • – the cooperation is through the exchange of
electron-donor substrates.
• – individual organisms cannot
be selected independently of their syntrophic partners.

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY (EXCHANGE OF GENETIC INFORMATION)

• Microorganisms can exchange genetic information in three ways:


o conjugation
o transformation
o transduction.
• CONJUGATION involves the replication and transfer of plasmid
DNA from a donor cell to a recipient cell.
• PRODUCT: both cells contain the plasmid: The donor cell retains
the plasmid, while the recipient cell gains the plasmid and
becomes a transconjugant.
• TRANSFER OF GENETIC INFORMATION by conjugation amplifies and
 Most exchanges in microbial ecosystems are not by consumption proliferates genes throughout a community, even when the
of an entire cell. Instead, one cell releases a molecule into the community has no net growth.
environment, and another cell takes it up in such a way that one • Plasmids contain genes that code for resistance to antibiotics and
or both cells benefit. other microbial toxicants, including the detoxification of many
 Thus, the main connections in a microbial ecosystem involve the hazardous compounds and elements.
exchange of molecules, not the consumption of one cell by • TRANSFORMATION occurs when free DNA is incorporated into the
another. chromosome of a recipient cell.
• Cells strictly regulate their uptake of DNA, and competence to
3 CHARACTERISTIC PATTERNS FOR MICROBIAL EXCHANGE OF take up free DNA and integrate it into the chromosome is not a
SUBSTRATE MOLECULES routine situation. DNA not transformed is rapidly degraded in the
environment or by nucleases inside the non-transforming cell.
1. Reduction of CO2 to organic carbon by phototrophs, • TRANSDUCTION involves the transfer of bacterial DNA from one
2. Release of partially oxidized organic intermediates, and cell to another using bacteriophage as the vector.
3. Cycling of inorganic elements • BACTERIOPHAGE first infects the donor bacterial cell and "by
chance" incorporates a piece of the bacterial DNA into its own
• PHOTOAUTOTROPHS (e.g., algae and cyanobacteria) and nucleic acid.
CHEMOAUTOTROPHS (e.g., bacteria that oxidize ammonium, sulfide, • The virus with its new DNA is then replicated inside the infected
and hydrogen gas) reduce inorganic carbon (oxidation state +4) to bacterium. When the bacterium lyses, the released
organic carbon with an oxidation state of roughly 0. bacteriophages then contain the donor DNA.
• Although their main purpose is to synthesize their own new biomass, • Infection of a different bacterial cell by this bacteriophage can
the AUTOTROPHS release part of the produced organic carbon as then result in the recombination of the donor's bacterial DNA into
soluble molecules that are electron-donor substrates for a range of the recipient's chromosome.
heterotrophic bacteria.
MICROBIAL ECOLOGY (GROWTH FACTORS & EXCHANGE OF
• The formation and exchange of organic intermediates is a second
widespread phenomenon in microbial ecosystems. CHEMICAL SIGNALS)

• Some prokaryotes require amino acids, fatty acids, or vitamins


for replication. Examples includes
o vitamin B12
o thiamine

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o biotin o copiotrophy (feast and famine; r-strategists or rapid
o riboflavin growth rates)
o folic acid.  SELECTIVE ENRICHMENT is a very important adaptation
mechanism in environmental biotechnology. The duration of the
Normally, these growth factors are released to the environment by other adaptation period depends on the enriched cell’s doubling time
microorganisms in the community. (under the conditions present) and its starting inoculum size.
• IN SOME SPECIAL CASES ,microorganisms receive chemical signals.  As a general rule, ADAPTATION BY SELECTIVE ENRICHMENT requires
These signal molecules bind to receptors on the cell membrane a few days to several months, and it should be marked by a
and trigger a physiological response. significant alteration in community structure.
 ENZYME REGULATION, the second adaptation mechanism, does not
Example: Aerobacterium, which senses products from plants that
require a change in community structure, and it usually involves a
it infects. These signal molecules accele rate the conjugative short adaptation period, measured in hours.
proliferation of plasmids, which code for the abili ty to infect the  ADAPTATION BY ENZYME REGULATION occurs when the community
plant. already contains a substantial number of microorganisms
capable of responding since the response is coded on one or
QUORUM SENSING more regulated enzymes. Induction or depression of enzyme
synthesis occurs rapidly in response to environmental stress.
• QUORUM SENSING, cells alter their phenotype when they are
closely aggregated, such as in biofilms. The cells constitutively  The third adaptation mechanism is EXCHANGED GENETIC MATERIAL,
release the signaling molecule. When the concentration of the which includes;
molecule builds up sufficiently, it is detected by a receptor on the o conjugation
cell, and this induces a phenotypic response. o transformation
o transduction
• Good examples;
• induced biofilm formation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa  CONJUGATION is the most rapid and general exchange mechanism
• bioluminescence by Vibrio fischeri. in environmental biotechnology.
 PROLIFERATION OF CRITICAL GENETIC INFORMATION throughout a
SUMMARY OF EXCHANGE MECHANISMS USED BY M ICROBIAL community could take place very rapidly, with adaptation
periods of hours to days.
COMMUNITIES
 ADAPTATION VIA GENETIC EXCHANGE NEED not involve an alteration
to community structure.

STOICHIOMETRY AND BACTERIAL ENERGETICS


Porges et al. (1956) obtained the equation from empirical data for a
casein-containing wastewater.

Could we predict the stoichiometry of such a reaction? The answer is yes,


and the rest of the chapter develops and applies an approach for doing
this. To achieve this goal, we need three things:

1. Empirical formula for cells.


ADAPTATION
2. Framework for describing how the electron-donor substrate is
 Because of their complex nature, microbial ecosystems are able partitioned between energy generation and synthesis
to respond in a very dynamic manner to changes in their 3. Means to relate the proportion of the electron-donor substrate
environment, particularly changes that stress the community. that is used to synthesize new biomass to the energy gained from
 The term used to describe the community's response to stress is catabolism and the energy needed for anabolism.
adaptation. Sometimes, the term acclimation is used as a
M ass balance is very crucial concept in the engineering design of systems for
synonym. biological tre atment.
 Adaptation is any response that ultimately leads the community
to eliminate the stress or find a way to maintain its function
despite the stress. QUANTITY OF SUBSTRATE TO BE PROCESSED
 Ex. Adaptation to recalcitrant or xenobiotic chemical.
• MASS BALANCE indicates the amount of different chemical that
must supplied to satisfy the energy, nutrient and environmental
SUMMARY OF ADAPTATION MECHANISMS needs of the microorganisms.
• Also, it allows estimation of the amounts of products that will be
generated (excess microorganisms or biosolids, CH4 from
anaerobic systems, C02, H20, etc.)

CHEMICALS THAT MAY BE NEEDED:

• OXYGEN as electron acceptor


• NITROGEN AND PHOSPHORUS as nutrients for biomass growth
• LIME OR SULFURIC ACID to maintain the pH in the desired range.
 – microbes are able to benefit
from the stress, grow selectively, and become a larger proportion STOICHIOMETRY
of the total biomass.
 Responses to substrate loading pattern: • The molar relationships among reactants and products in a
o oligotrophy (scavenging substrates present at low chemical reaction.
concentration) or K-strategists, slow growth rate.

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OTHER IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS

1. Microbial reaction often involves oxidation and reduction of


more than one species
2. The roles of microbes are two folds
o Catalyst for the reaction
o Products of the reaction
3. Microorganisms carry out most chemical reactions in order to
capture some of the energy released for cell synthesis and for
maintaining cellular activity.

Thus, we must consider reaction energetics, as well as the balancing


of elements, electrons, and charge.

SUBTRATE PARTITIONIN G AND CELLULAR YIELD

• When use as electron donor substrate


for synthesis, the portion of its electrons 𝑓𝑒0 is initially transferred
to the electron acceptor to provide energy for the conversion of
the other portion of electrons 𝑓𝑠0 into the microbial cells.
• The portions of the donor converted into the cells 𝑓𝑠0 and into
energy 𝑓𝑒0 provides the frameworks for partitioning the substrate
between energy generation and synthesis.
• 1 electron = organic donor =1 electron = O, which is 1/8 mole
of oxygen or 8g.

• – is the difference between the


maximum growth rate from substrate consumption minus the rate
of loss or decay due to self (endogenous) respiration.
• If the rate of substrate utilization per unit mass of cells is
sufficiently low - 𝛾𝑛 approaches 0.
• The substrate utilization rate would be the just sufficient to maintain the
cells, and no net growth of cells would result .
• So when the substrate utilization is less tan m, the substrate available is
insufficient to satisfy the total metabolic needs of the microorganism .
This is a form of starvation and net yield becomes negative.

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