Naphthenic
acid fraction compounds (NAFCs) are naturally present
in the oil sand. These compounds become integrated into the oil sands
process-affected water (OSPW) during the bitumen extraction process.
NAFCs have been identified as causing toxicity in the OSPW to aquatic
organisms. Water treatment technologies that are largely passive,
such as constructed treatment wetlands, are a sought-after technology
for the degradation of NAFCs in aquatic environments, partly because
of their low energy intensity. However, it can be challenging to accurately
assess the performance regarding decreased NAFC concentration and
biodegradation characteristics in water samples that have been exposed
to such systems. This is due to interferences of biological products
such as fatty acids and humic-like materials, which may give false-positive
information on NAFCs estimation with conventional analytical sample
cleanup methods such as liquid–liquid extraction (LLE). It
is recognized that this same issue exists when attempting to characterize
NAFCs in natural wetlands for environmental monitoring purposes and,
therefore, an analytical method that can remove background interferences
in water samples is desirable on several fronts. Studies were thus
conducted to develop and compare methods for NAFC isolation in an
experimental wetland setting. A controlled greenhouse experiment was
conducted with sedge (Carex aquatilis), bulrush (Schoenoplectus acutus),
and cattail (Typha latifolia) grown
in OSPW. Two methodsthe Isolute Biotage ENV+ SPE method and
a new weak anion exchange (WAX SPE)were assessed for their
ability to isolate, clean up, and concentrate NAFCs in OSPW and municipal
tap water (control) that were exposed to samples of plants and associated
microbes. Negative-ion-electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion
cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (ESI-FT-ICR-MS) data revealed
that WAX SPE method has better relative enhancement (5%–50%)
of O2 classes in OSPW exposed to wetland plants, compared
to ENV+ SPE method. The WAX SPE method is a good candidate for the
isolation of organic compounds in complex environmental matrices and
supports the development of analytical protocols for isolation and
characterization of NAFCs. Compound classes from negative-ion ESI-FT-ICR-MS
data were further probed using principal component analysis (PCA)
to evaluate the NAFCs that are potential indicators of efficiency
of engineered wetlands for monitoring in future wetland studies. Given
the PCA results, future wetland NAFC degradation investigations should
target O2 classes for detailed evaluation of the performance
of treatment systems, or measurement of the fate and distributions
of NAFCs in natural wetlands exposed to OSPW.
In 2010, bottles of beer containing viable bacteria of the common beer-spoilage species Lactobacillus backii and Pediococcus damnosus were recovered from a shipwreck near the Åland Islands, Finland. The 170-year quiescent state maintained by the shipwreck bacteria presented a unique opportunity to study lactic acid bacteria (LAB) evolution vis-a-vis growth and survival in the beer environment. Three shipwreck bacteria (one L. backii strain and two P. damnosus strains) and modern-day beer-spoilage isolates of the same two species were genome sequenced, characterized for hop iso-α-acid tolerance, and growth in degassed lager and wheat beer. In addition, plasmid variants of the modern-day P. damnosus strain were analyzed for the effect of plasmid-encoded genes on growth in lager beer. Coding content on two plasmids was identified as essential for LAB growth in modern lager beer. Three chromosomal regions containing genes related to sugar transport and cell wall polysaccharides were shared by pediococci able to grow in beer. Our results show that the three shipwreck bacteria lack the necessary plasmid-located genetic content to grow in modern lager beer, but carry additional genes related to acid tolerance and biofilm formation compared to their modern counterparts.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.