3 research outputs found
Microfluidics as an Emerging Platform for Exploring Soil Environmental Processes: A Critical Review
Investigating environmental processes,
especially those occurring
in soils, calls for innovative and multidisciplinary technologies
that can provide insights at the microscale. The heterogeneity, opacity,
and dynamics make the soil a “black box” where interactions
and processes are elusive. Recently, microfluidics has emerged as
a powerful research platform and experimental tool which can create
artificial soil micromodels, enabling exploring soil processes on
a chip. Micro/nanofabricated microfluidic devices can mimic some of
the key features of soil with highly controlled physical and chemical
microenvironments at the scale of pores, aggregates, and microbes.
The combination of various techniques makes microfluidics an integrated
approach for observation, reaction, analysis, and characterization.
In this review, we systematically summarize the emerging applications
of microfluidic soil platforms, from investigating soil interfacial
processes and soil microbial processes to soil analysis and high-throughput
screening. We highlight how innovative microfluidic devices are used
to provide new insights into soil processes, mechanisms, and effects
at the microscale, which contribute to an integrated interrogation
of the soil systems across different scales. Critical discussions
of the practical limitations of microfluidic soil platforms and perspectives
of future research directions are summarized. We envisage that microfluidics
will represent the technological advances toward microscopic, controllable,
and in situ soil research
Biochar Effectively Inhibits the Horizontal Transfer of Antibiotic Resistance Genes via Restraining the Energy Supply for Conjugative Plasmid Transfer
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of antibiotic resistance
genes (ARGs)
through plasmid-mediated conjugation poses a major threat to global
public health. Biochar, a widely used environmental remediation material,
has remarkable impacts on the fate of ARGs. However, although biochar
was reported being able to inhibit the HGT of ARGs via conjugation
and transformation, little is known about the intracellular process
that mediates the inhibition effects. On the other hand, as typical
natural organic matter, fulvic acid is a common environmental influencer,
and how it interferes with the effect of biochar on the HGT of ARGs
is unknown. Therefore, this study investigated the effects on the
conjugative transfer of ARGs between Escherichia coli MG1655 and E. coli HB101 carrying
plasmid RP4, with biochars pyrolyzed at three temperatures and with
the corresponding biochars coating with fulvic acid. Results showed
that biochar with higher pyrolyzed temperature had a more substantial
inhibitory effect on the conjugative transfer of the RP4 plasmid.
The inhibitory effect of biochar was mainly attributed to (i) down-regulation
of plasmid transfer gene expression, including the formation of conjugative
transfer channel and plasmid replication, due to restrained adenosine
triphosphate (ATP) energy supply and (ii) decreased cell membrane
permeability. Conversely, the fulvic acid coating diminished this
inhibition effect of biochar, mainly by providing more ATP and strengthening
intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) defense. Our findings
shed light on the intracellular process that mediates the effects
of biochar on the conjugative transfer of ARGs, which would provide
support for using biochar to reduce the spread of ARGs
Metabolic and Microbial Profiling of Soil Microbial Community under Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substance (PFAS) Stress
Per-
and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) represent significant
stress to organisms and are known to disrupt microbial community structure
and function. Nevertheless, a detailed knowledge of the soil microbial
community responding to PFAS stress at the metabolism level is required.
Here we integrated UPLC-HRMS-based metabolomics data with 16S rRNA
and ITS amplicon data across soil samples collected adjacent to a
fluoropolymer production facility to directly identify the biochemical
intermediates in microbial metabolic pathways and the interactions
with microbial community structure under PFAS stress. A strong correlation
between metabolite and microbial diversity was observed, which demonstrated
significant variations in soil metabolite profiles and microbial community
structures along with the sampling locations relative to the facility.
Certain key metabolites were identified in the metabolite–PFAS
co-occurrence network, functioning on microbial metabolisms including
lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and secondary metabolite
biosynthesis. These results provide novel insights into the impacts
of PFAS contamination on soil metabolomes and microbiomes. We suggest
that soil metabolomics is an informative and useful tool that could
be applied to reinforce the chemical evidence on the disruption of
microbial ecological traits
