Now showing 1 - 8 of 8
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    Diminishing bioavailability and toxicity of P25 TiO2 NPs during continuous exposure to marine algae Chlorella sp.
    (01-10-2019)
    Thiagarajan, Vignesh
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    M., Pavani
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    S., Archanaa
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    R., Seenivasan
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    N., Chandrasekaran
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
    Titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs) find applications in our day-to-day life because of unique physicochemical properties. Their release into the aquatic environment poses a possible risk to the organisms. However, the continuing exposure of NPs might reduce their bioavailability to marine organisms owing to aggregation and sedimentation in the aqueous systems thus significantly reducing their toxic impact. In this regard, the present study investigates the effect of continuous exposure of TiO2 NPs to marine microalgae Chlorella sp. under UV-A irradiation through “tanks in series” mode of experiments. In a three-cycle experiment, concentration of TiO2 NPs in the first cycle was fixed at 62.6 μM, and the interacted nanoparticles was subsequently exposed to fresh batches of algae in the next two cycles. After the interaction, the NPs underwent severe aggregation (mean hydrodynamic diameter 3000 ± 18.2 nm after cycle I) leading to gravitational settling in the medium and thus decreased bioavailability. The aggregation can be attributed to interactions between the particles themselves (homo-aggregation) further aggravated by the presence of the algal cells (hetero-aggregation). Cellular viability after cycle I was found to be only 24.2 ± 2.5%, and it was enhanced to 96.5 ± 2.8% after the cycle III in the course of continuous exposure. The results were validated with estimation of oxidative stress markers such as intracellular ROS (total ROS, superoxide and hydroxyl radicals) and LPO after each cycle of exposure. The continuing decrease in the EPS across the cycles further confirmed the diminishing toxicity of the NPs.
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    Cytotoxicity of ZnO NPs towards fresh water algae Scenedesmus obliquus at low exposure concentrations in UV-C, visible and dark conditions
    (01-05-2015)
    Bhuvaneshwari, M.
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    Iswarya, V.
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    Archanaa, S.
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    Madhu, G. M.
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    Chandrasekaran, N.
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
    Continuous increase in the usage of ZnO nanoparticles in commercial products has exacerbated the risk of release of these particles into the aquatic environment with possible harmful effects on the biota. In the current study, cytotoxic effects of two types of ZnO nanoparticles, having different initial effective diameters in filtered and sterilized lake water medium [487.5±2.55nm for ZnO-1 NPs and 616.2±38.5nm for ZnO-2 NPs] were evaluated towards a dominant freshwater algal isolate Scenedesmus obliquus in UV-C, visible and dark conditions at three exposure concentrations: 0.25, 0.5 and 1mg/L. The toxic effects were found to be strongly dependent on the initial hydrodynamic particle size in the medium, the exposure concentrations and the irradiation conditions. The loss in viability, LDH release and ROS generation were significantly enhanced in the case of the smaller sized ZnO-1 NPs than in the case of ZnO-2 NPs under comparable test conditions. The toxicity of both types of ZnO NPs was considerably elevated under UV-C irradiation in comparison to that in dark and visible light conditions, the effects being more enhanced in case of ZnO-1 NPs. The size dependent dissolution of the ZnO NPs in the test medium and possible toxicity due to the released Zn2+ ions was also noted. The surface adsorption of the nanoparticles was substantiated by scanning electron microscopy. The internalization/uptake of the NPs by the algal cells was confirmed by fluorescence microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and elemental analyses.
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    Eco-corona formation lessens the toxic effects of polystyrene nanoplastics towards marine microalgae Chlorella sp.
    (01-09-2020)
    Natarajan, Lokeshwari
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    Omer, Sonal
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    Jetly, Nishta
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    Jenifer, M. Annie
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    Chandrasekaran, N.
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
    Unabated use of nanoplastics (<1 μm) in the consumer products and their consequent release to the marine environment poses a substantial threat to the marine ecosystem. The toxic impact of the nanoplastics on marine microalgae is yet to be explored in detail, and the role of reactive oxygen species generation remains largely unclear. The algal exudates constitute a significant part of the natural organics present in the marine system that may readily adsorb over the nanoplastics to form eco-corona. In the current work a marine alga, Chlorella sp., was considered a bioindicator organism and the effects of eco-corona formation in lessening the toxic impact of the nanoplastics was analyzed. Three differently functionalized polystyrene nanoplastics (PS NPs): Aminated (NH2-PS NPs), Carboxylated (COOH-PS NPs) and Plain nanoplastics were aged (12, 24, and 48 h) in the EPS containing medium to facilitate eco-corona formation. Decline in cell viability, membrane integrity, and photosynthetic yield were considered to be principle toxicity indicators. The role of oxidative stress as key mode of action (MOA) was studied considering generation of overall reactive oxygen species, and specific radicals (hydroxyl and superoxide) as relevant markers. The changes in antioxidant enzyme activities (superoxide dismutase, and catalase) were also measured. The results clearly indicate a significant decline in the oxidative stress and corresponding lessening of the toxic effects due to eco-corona formation on the PS NPs. The response varied with surface charge on the NPs and ageing duration. Considering the increasing importance of the nanoplastics as one of the major emerging pollutants in marine ecosystem, this study strongly suggests that the EPS mediated eco-corona formation may substantially lessen their toxic burden.
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    Polystyrene nanoplastics diminish the toxic effects of Nano-TiO2 in marine algae Chlorella sp.
    (01-03-2022)
    Natarajan, Lokeshwari
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    Jenifer, M. Annie
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    Chandrasekaran, N.
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
    Widespread usage of nano-TiO2 in various commercial products and their consequent release into the seawater pose a severe threat to marine biota. Nanoplastics, a secondary pollutant in the marine environment, could influence adverse effects of nano-TiO2. The main goal of the present study was to investigate the influence of the differently functionalized polystyrene nanoplastics (COOH-PSNPs, NH2-PSNPs, and Plain-PSNPs) on the acute toxic effects of P25 nano-TiO2 in marine algae Chlorella sp. Three different concentrations of nano-TiO2, 0.25, 0.5, and 1 mg/L, mixed with 5 mg/L of the PSNPs were employed in this study. A substantial increase was noted in mean hydrodynamic sizes of nano-TiO2 when they were mixed with the PSNPs. This hetero-aggregation would reduce the bioavailability of the particles to the algae. The presence of the PSNPs in the mixture reduced the toxicity of nano-TiO2 significantly. A signficant decline in the oxidative stress parameters like total ROS, superoxide ([Formula presented]), and hydroxyl radical generation was noted for the mixture of nano-TiO2 with the PSNPs in comparison with the pristine counterparts. The lipid peroxidation, and the antioxidant enzyme activities in the cells correlated well with the reactive species generation results. The treatments with the mixture resulted in notable enhancement in the esterase activity in the cells. The Independent Action model suggested antagonistic interactions between PSNPs and nano-TiO2. The results from this study clearly demonstrate that nano-TiO2 in presence of the PSNPs exerted significantly reduced cytotoxic effects in Chlorella sp, in comparison with the pristine particles.
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    Investigating the potential use of an oleaginous bacterium, Rhodococcus opacus PD630, for nano-TiO2 remediation
    (01-08-2020)
    Sundararaghavan, Archanaa
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
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    The occurrence of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (nTiO2), in the effluents released from wastewater treatment plants, has raised concerns. The fate of nTiO2 and their potential impact on organisms from different ecosystems are widely investigated. For the first time, in this work, we report the responses of an oleaginous bacteria Rhodococcus opacus PD630, belonging to an ecologically important genus Rhodococcus to environmentally relevant concentrations of nTiO2, under dark and UV light conditions. We observed a dose-dependent increase in nTiO2 uptake by the bacteria that reached a maximum of 1.4 mg nTiO2 (g cell)-1 under mid-log UV exposure, corresponding to 97% uptake. The nTiO2 induced oxidative stress in bacteria that increased from 25.1 to a maximum of 100.3, 44.1, and 51.7 μmol .OH (g cell)-1 under dark, continuous, and mid-log UV, respectively. However, nTiO2 did not affect bacterial viability. Further, due to oxidative stress, the triacylglycerol (biodiesel) content from bacteria increased from 30% to a maximum of 54% CDW. Based on our findings, we propose an application of R. opacus PD 630 in nTiO2 remediation due to their high nTiO2 uptake and resistance.
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    Sustainable Diesel Feedstock: a Comparison of Oleaginous Bacterial and Microalgal Model Systems
    (15-03-2019)
    Archanaa, S.
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    Jose, Steffi
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
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    The key to sustainable and commercially viable biodiesel production relies primarily on species selection. Oleaginous species with high biomass productivity, lipid content, and lipid productivity are desirable. High growth rate of the species results in high biomass productivity, which leads to high lipid productivity. It is known that algal oil technology lacks commercial feasibility predominantly due to low biomass productivity and other factors. The use of a faster-growing organism, such as oleaginous bacteria, could offset this major disadvantage. Thus, the current study analyzes two model oleaginous systems: Rhodococcus opacus PD630 (a bacterium) and Chlorella vulgaris NIOT5 (a microalga) for their growth rate and lipid productivity. It was found that the bacterial growth rate was 25-fold the microalgal growth rate. The bacterium also showed 57-fold higher biomass productivity and 75-fold higher biodiesel productivity. Further, the analysis of a large number of literature data from relevant studies under different cultivation conditions showed that R. opacus PD630 has productivities far higher than various autotrophic microalgae. Similarly, a frequency distribution of data collected from the literature showed that Rhodococcus sp. has productivities in the higher range as compared to heterotrophic microalgae. Thus, bacteria could serve as a better alternative to microalgae toward developing a commercially viable biofuel technology. Further, the biodiesel characterization study showed that the quality of diesel from the bacterium was better than that from the microalga.
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    Cytotoxicity of titania nanoparticles towards waste water isolate Exiguobacterium acetylicum under UVA, visible light and dark conditions
    (14-07-2015)
    Mathur, Ankita
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    Raghavan, Archanaa
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    Chaudhury, Pallavi
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    Johnson, J. B.
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    Roy, Rajdeep
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    Kumari, Jyoti
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    Chaudhuri, Gouri
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    Chandrasekaran, N.
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
    Abstract The aim of the current study was to explore the different modes of the cytotoxicity effects of titania nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs) towards the dominant waste water isolate Exiguobacterium acetylicum at an exposure dose of ≤1 μg/mL in the sterilized and filtered waste water already containing 0.770 ± 0.02 μg/mL dissolved Ti4+ ions, under different conditions (UVA, Visible Light and Dark). The aggregation behaviour of TiO2 NPs in the experimental matrix was studied for 0.25, 0.5 and 1 μg/mL concentrations at different time intervals (0, 6 and 12 h). The reduction in cell viability under UVA was significantly more than that of other two conditions, i.e., dark and visible light. At 1 μg/mL of titania NPs for an exposure period of 6 h the cell viability with respect to control was found to be as follows: UVA (11.1 ± 0.33%)
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    Mechanism of the oxidative stress-mediated increase in lipid accumulation by the bacterium, R. opacus PD630: Experimental analysis and genome-scale metabolic modeling
    (01-06-2020)
    Sundararaghavan, Archanaa
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    Mukherjee, Amitava
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    Appropriate species of oleaginous bacteria, with their high growth rates and lipid accumulation capabilities, can be good contenders for industrial triacylglycerol (TAG) production, compared to microalgae. Further, oxidative stress (OS) can be used to significantly increase TAG yields in oleaginous microbes, but the mechanism is unexplored. In a first, this study explored the mechanism behind OS-mediated increase in TAG accumulation by the bacterium, Rhodococccus opacus PD630, through experimental analysis and metabolic modelling. Two mechanisms that could increase acetyl-CoA (TAG-precursor) levels were hypothesized based on literature information. One was OS-mediated inactivation of the aconitase (TCA cycle), and another was the inactivation of the triosephosphate isomerase (TPI; glycolysis). The results negated the involvement of aconitase in increased acetyl-CoA levels. Analysis of the metabolic model showed that inactivation of TPI, re-routed the flux through the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP), supplying both NADPH and acetyl-CoA for TAG synthesis. Additionally, inactivation of TPI increased TAG flux by 143%, whereas, inactivating both TPI and aconitase, increased it by 152%. We present experimental evidence for OS-mediated decrease in TPI activity and increase in activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (PPP enzyme). The findings indicate that increased flux through PPP can be explored to improve TAG accumulation on a large-scale.