Bacterial Strain May Help Clean Up Harmful Industrial Waste
Attention
Editors, Reporters: A copy of the journal article on
which this news release is based is available by calling
Andrea Gibson at (740) 597-2166 or Charlene Clifford at
(740) 593-0946.
Contact:
Peter Coschigano, (740) 593-9488; coschiga@ohio.edu
ATHENS,
Ohio (February 28, 2000) -- Mother Nature has a special
weapon to fight off threats to her environmental health:
bacteria. But just how these tiny microbes do their work
remains a mystery, one an Ohio University microbiologist is
trying to unravel.
Under his
microscope is a bacterial strain called T1 capable of
breaking down one of the most commonly used industrial
solvents, toluene. A common but toxic ingredient in
gasoline, adhesives and household solvents, the substance
has been known to contaminate groundwater and soil.
"A lot of
current cleanup techniques involve taking all the
contaminated soil from a site and hauling it off somewhere
and dumping it or burning it," says Peter Coschigano, an
assistant professor of environmental microbiology and lead
investigator on this National Science Foundation-funded
project. "That -- if you talk about tons and tons of soil --
can be expensive, and you're left with a big hole in the
ground."
But
environmental remediation professionals might be able to
avoid pockmarking the earth if researchers can understand
what conditions must exist for bacterial strains such as T1
to digest dangerous contaminants.
"The
potential is that it can be more cost-effective and less
damaging to the environment," says Coschigano, whose
research appears in the March issue of the journal
Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
T1
metabolizes toluene, a hazardous substance widely used as an
industrial solvent. Though toluene can enter the environment
via spilled drops of gas at the filling station, the use of
paint thinners, or small industrial leaks, the bigger health
and environmental threat would be a large-scale industrial
accident, which can contaminate groundwater and soil.
Researchers
at the New York University Medical Center discovered the
bacterial strain T1 about 10 years ago, digging through the
mud at contaminated sites in search of an organism in the
natural environment that could break down toluene without
oxygen, which is absent in some polluted areas. Coschigano
is investigating how T1 metabolizes the substance, what
genes are involved, and how the process is turned on and
off.
He has
confirmed the first step in T1's use of toluene for fuel:
Proteins produced from four genes under examination are
responsible for carrying out the process. Three of the
proteins, which work together as a team, are activated by a
fourth protein. "They are all needed to do the work," he
says. "Just like a car needs an engine, brakes and tires to
work." Coschigano also has detected a fifth, previously
unidentified gene in the bacterium, but doesn't know what
role -- if any -- it plays.
Coschigano
studies how the bacterial strain regulates its metabolism of
toluene by testing T1 on pyruvate, a carbon substance with a
much different structural composition than toluene. When the
bacterial strain is grown on pyruvate, the genes responsible
for metabolism don't switch on, unlike the activity seen
when the bacterial strain is bred on toluene.
Even if
Coschigano determines how to control T1's appetite for
toluene in the lab, he doesn't know how efficiently the
bacterial strain will clean up contaminants in the complex
natural environment. A more predictable, easier and cheaper
option might be to unleash T1 on toluene in a contained,
industrial setting -- before toluene has a chance to escape
into the environment.
"Toluene
is one of the most widely-used industrial solvents," he
says. "There can be situations where companies have a lot of
toluene waste they need to dispose of. And instead of
incinerating it, if we can deal with it in a contained
system, we might be able to reduce that cost."
Coschigano
received a five-year Faculty Early Career Development
(CAREER) grant from the NSF in 1998. He holds an appointment
in the College of Osteopathic Medicine.