Ph. D. Thesis.Centralised water treatment infrastructure is increasingly being put under strain due to
population growth. In situ treatment (i.e. a distributed treatment network) may minimise or even
negate the need for centralised infrastructure. Cyanobacteria grown in open-ponds and
photobioreactors are used for wastewater treatment; however these cultivation systems struggle
with batch consistency and have a high capital cost. Biocomposites (biomass immobilised on a
solid substrate within a semi-porous matrix) theoretically support increased active biomass
within a more compact space and prevent cell wash-out, thereby increasing bioremediation
efficiency. Wild-type Synechococcus elongatus (strains PCC 7942 and CCAP 1479/1A) and a
novel engineered strain (SBG363; designed to overproduce and excrete sucrose) were trialled
as potential bioremediation biocomposites. Commercial latex-based binders (AURO 320 and
321) were used for biocoatings formulation, and applied to a selection of natural and synthetic
textiles to form textile-based biocomposites. Biomass growth was increased by up to 800%,
retaining up to 97% of biomass after 72 hours. Sucrose output from S. elongatus SGB363 was
unaffected. Wild-type immobilised biomass supported up to 80% greater CO2 sequestration
over a 20-day period than its suspension culture control. However, after three and six days of
immobilisation there were no significant differences in total protein content, CO2 removal, or
orthophosphate uptake per cell between immobilised and suspension treatments. Whole
transcriptome sequencing (RNA-Seq) was attempted to determine the genetic response of S.
elongatus surviving within a biocoating. However, immobilised samples had very low RNA
integrity number equivalents that prevented differential gene expression analysis. This research
shows that cyanobacteria textile biocomposites are a promising solution for process
intensification in the wastewater treatment industry, and addresses concerns regarding
environmental safeguarding. Metabolically active biocomposites can be used for de-centralised
wastewater treatment applications thereby alleviating problems associated with Victorian era
infrastructure without creating an additional environmental burden.Enviresearch Foundatio
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