Acinetobacter bioreporter assessing heavy metals toxicity
β Scribed by Desouky Abd-El-Haleem; Sahar Zaki; Ashraf Abulhamd; Hassan Elbery; Gadallah Abu-Elreesh
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 114 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0233-111X
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
This work was conducted to employ a whole cellβbased biosensor to monitor toxicity of heavy metals in water and wastewater. An isolate of industrial wastewater bacterium, Acinetobacter sp. DF4, was genetically modified with lux reporter gene to create a novel bioluminescent bacterial strain, designated as DF4/PUTK2. This bioreporter can investigate the toxicity through light inhibition due to cell death or metabolic burden and the specific stress effects of the tested soluble materials simultaneously. The use of Acinetobacter DF4/PUTK2 as a bioluminescent reporter for heavy metal toxicity testing and for the application of wastewater treatment influent toxicity screening is presented in this study. Among eight heavy metals tested, the bioluminescence of DF4/PUTK2 was most sensitive to Zn, Cd, Fe, Co, Cr followed by Cu in order of decreasing sensitivity. The same pattern of sensitivity was observed when several contaminated water and wastewater effluents were assayed. This work suggested that luxCDABE βmarked Acinetobacter bacterium DF4/PUTK2 can be used to bioassay the ecotoxicity of wastewater and effluent samples contaminated with heavy metals. Using this assay, it is possible to preβselect the more toxic samples for further chemical analysis and to discard wastewater samples with low or no inhibition because they are not toxic to the environment. (Β© 2006 WILEYβVCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
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