6 research outputs found
Estimation of Reactive Thiol Concentrations in Dissolved Organic Matter and Bacterial Cell Membranes in Aquatic Systems
Organic thiols are highly reactive ligands and play an
important
role in the speciation of several metals and organic pollutants in
the environment. Although small thiols can be isolated and their concentrations
can be estimated using chromatographic and derivatization techniques,
estimating concentrations of thiols associated with biomacromolecules
and humic substances has been difficult. Here we present a fluorescence-spectroscopy-based
method for estimating thiol concentrations in biomacromolecules and
cell membranes using one of the soluble bromobimanes, monobromoÂ(trimethylammonio)Âbimane
(qBBr). The fluorescence of this molecule increases significantly
when it binds to a thiol. The change in the sample fluorescence due
to thiols reacting with qBBr is used to determine thiol concentration
in a sample. Using this method, small thiols such as cysteine and
glutathione can be detected in clean solutions down to ∼50
nM without their separation and prior concentration. Thiols associated
with dissolved organic matter (DOM) can be detected down to low micromolar
concentration, depending on the DOM background fluorescence. The charge
on qBBr prevents its rapid diffusion across cell membranes, so qBBr
is ideal for estimating thiol concentration at the cell membrane–water
interface. This method was successfully used to determine the thiol
concentration on the cell envelope of intact <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> to nanomolar concentration without any special sample preparation.
Among the chemical species tested for potential interferences (other
reduced sulfides methionine and cystine, carboxylate, salt (MgCl<sub>2</sub>)), carboxylates significantly influenced the absolute fluorescence
signal of the thiol–qBBr complex. However, this does not affect
the detection of thiols in heterogeneous mixtures using the presented
method
Novel Apatite-Based Sorbent for Defluoridation: Synthesis and Sorption Characteristics of Nano-micro-crystalline Hydroxyapatite-Coated-Limestone
Elevated levels of fluoride (F<sup>–</sup>) in groundwaters
of granitic and basaltic terrains pose a major environmental problem
and are affecting millions of people all over the world. Hydroxyapatite
(HA) has been shown to be a strong sorbent for F<sup>–</sup>; however, low permeability of synthetic HA results in poor sorption
efficiency. Here we provide a novel method of synthesizing nano- to
micrometer sized HA on the surfaces of granular limestone to improve
the sorption efficiency of the HA-based filter. Our experiments with
granular limestone (38–63, 125–500 μm) and dissolved
PO<sub>4</sub><sup>3–</sup> (0.5–5.3 mM) as a function
of pH (6–8) and temperature (25–80 °C) indicated
rapid formation of nano- to micrometer sized HA crystals on granular
limestone with the maximum surface coverage at lower pH and in the
presence of multiple additions of aqueous PO<sub>4</sub><sup>3–</sup>. The HA crystal morphology varied with the above variables. The
sorption kinetics and magnitude of F<sup>–</sup> sorption by
HA-coated-fine limestone are comparable to those of pure HA, and the
F<sup>–</sup> levels dropped to below the World Health Organization’s
drinking water limit of 79 μM for F<sup>–</sup> concentrations
commonly encountered in contaminated potable waters, suggesting that
these materials could be used as effective filters. Fluorine XANES
spectra of synthetic HA reacted with F<sup>–</sup> suggest
that the mode of sorption is through the formation of fluoridated-HA
or fluorapatite at low F<sup>–</sup> levels and fluorite at
high F<sup>–</sup> loadings
Novel Apatite-Based Sorbent for Defluoridation: Synthesis and Sorption Characteristics of Nano-micro-crystalline Hydroxyapatite-Coated-Limestone
Elevated levels of fluoride (F<sup>–</sup>) in groundwaters
of granitic and basaltic terrains pose a major environmental problem
and are affecting millions of people all over the world. Hydroxyapatite
(HA) has been shown to be a strong sorbent for F<sup>–</sup>; however, low permeability of synthetic HA results in poor sorption
efficiency. Here we provide a novel method of synthesizing nano- to
micrometer sized HA on the surfaces of granular limestone to improve
the sorption efficiency of the HA-based filter. Our experiments with
granular limestone (38–63, 125–500 μm) and dissolved
PO<sub>4</sub><sup>3–</sup> (0.5–5.3 mM) as a function
of pH (6–8) and temperature (25–80 °C) indicated
rapid formation of nano- to micrometer sized HA crystals on granular
limestone with the maximum surface coverage at lower pH and in the
presence of multiple additions of aqueous PO<sub>4</sub><sup>3–</sup>. The HA crystal morphology varied with the above variables. The
sorption kinetics and magnitude of F<sup>–</sup> sorption by
HA-coated-fine limestone are comparable to those of pure HA, and the
F<sup>–</sup> levels dropped to below the World Health Organization’s
drinking water limit of 79 μM for F<sup>–</sup> concentrations
commonly encountered in contaminated potable waters, suggesting that
these materials could be used as effective filters. Fluorine XANES
spectra of synthetic HA reacted with F<sup>–</sup> suggest
that the mode of sorption is through the formation of fluoridated-HA
or fluorapatite at low F<sup>–</sup> levels and fluorite at
high F<sup>–</sup> loadings
Production of Black Carbon-like and Aliphatic Molecules from Terrestrial Dissolved Organic Matter in the Presence of Sunlight and Iron
Photochemical
processing of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in natural
waters can alter its composition and structure, supply particulate
organic matter (POM) to sediments, and deliver modified terrestrial
DOM to the ocean. Our studies show that terrestrial DOM exposed to
simulated sunlight is altered to produce POM with a markedly different
molecular composition enriched with newly formed aliphatic and condensed
aromatic molecules. This process is closely tied to the chemistry
of iron, which primarily exists as dissolved FeÂ(II) and FeÂ(III)–organic
complexes in initial DOM and photochemically matures to FeÂ(III) oxyhydroxides
before coprecipitating out with POM. The newly formed condensed aromatic
compounds resemble black carbon, which until now was thought to be
produced by only combustion. These new molecules contribute a pool
of Fe-rich, aliphatic, and black carbon-like organic matter to sediments
as the terrestrial DOM is transported through rivers. We estimate
that the annual global flux of this photoproduced black carbon, most
of which may be preserved in sediments, is nearly equivalent to the
estimated flux of dissolved black carbon to the ocean from all other
sources
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Nanoscale Transforming Mineral Phases in Fresh Nacre
Nacre,
or mother-of-pearl, the iridescent inner layer of many mollusk
shells, is a biomineral lamellar composite of aragonite (CaCO<sub>3</sub>) and organic sheets. Biomineralization frequently occurs
via transient amorphous precursor phases, crystallizing into the final
stable biomineral. In nacre, despite extensive attempts, amorphous
calcium carbonate (ACC) precursors have remained elusive. They were
inferred from non-nacre-forming larval shells, or from a residue of
amorphous material surrounding mature gastropod nacre tablets, and
have only once been observed in bivalve nacre. Here we present the
first direct observation of ACC precursors to nacre formation, obtained
from the growth front of nacre in gastropod shells from red abalone
(<i>Haliotis rufescens</i>), using synchrotron spectromicroscopy.
Surprisingly, the abalone nacre data show the same ACC phases that
are precursors to calcite (CaCO<sub>3</sub>) formation in sea urchin
spicules, and not proto-aragonite or poorly crystalline aragonite
(pAra), as expected for aragonitic nacre. In contrast, we find pAra
in coral
Ubiquitous Presence of Fe(II) in Aquatic Colloids and Its Association with Organic Carbon
Despite being thermodynamically less
stable, small ferrous colloids
(60 nm to 3 μm in diameter) remain an important component of
the biogeochemical cycle at the Earth’s surface, yet their
composition and structure and the reasons for their persistence are
still poorly understood. Here we use X-ray-based Fe L-edge and carbon
K-edge spectromicroscopy to address the speciation and organic–mineral
associations of ferrous, ferric, and Fe-poor particles collected from
sampling sites in both marine and freshwater environments. We show
that FeÂ(II)-rich phases are prevalent throughout different aquatic
regimes yet exhibit a high degree of chemical heterogeneity. Furthermore,
we show that Fe-rich particles show strong associations with organic
carbon. The observed association of FeÂ(II) particles with carboxamide
functional groups suggests a possible microbial role in the preservation
of FeÂ(II). These finding have significant implications for the behavior
of FeÂ(II) colloids in oxygenated waters, and their role in different
aquatic biogeochemical processes