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Download filePerchlorate Reduction Using Free and Encapsulated Azospira oryzae Enzymes
journal contribution
posted on 2013-09-03, 00:00 authored by Justin
M. Hutchison, Sean K. Poust, Manish Kumar, Donald M. Cropek, Irene E. MacAllister, Clint M. Arnett, Julie L. ZillesExisting
methods for perchlorate remediation are hampered by the
common co-occurrence of nitrate, which is structurally similar and
a preferred electron acceptor. In this work, the potential for perchlorate
removal using cell-free bacterial enzymes as biocatalysts was investigated
using crude cell lysates and soluble protein fractions of Azospira oryzae PS, as well as soluble protein fractions
encapsulated in lipid and polymer vesicles. The crude lysates showed
activities between 41 700 to 54 400 U L–1 (2.49 to 3.06 U mg–1 total protein). Soluble protein
fractions had activities of 15 400 to 29 900 U L–1 (1.70 to 1.97 U mg–1) and still
retained an average of 58.2% of their original activity after 23 days
of storage at 4 °C under aerobic conditions. Perchlorate was
removed by the soluble protein fraction at higher rates than nitrate.
Importantly, perchlorate reduction occurred even in the presence of
500-fold excess nitrate. The soluble protein fraction retained its
function after encapsulation in lipid or polymer vesicles, with activities
of 13.8 to 70.7 U L–1, in agreement with theoretical
calculations accounting for the volume limitation of the vesicles.
Further, encapsulation mitigated enzyme inactivation by proteinase
K. Enzyme-based technologies could prove effective at perchlorate
removal from water cocontaminated with nitrate or sulfate.