Difference between revisions of "Team:Bielefeld-CeBiTec/Project/HeavyMetals"
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<div id="lead" style="display: none"> | <div id="lead" style="display: none"> | ||
<h3>Occurrence</h3> | <h3>Occurrence</h3> | ||
− | <p>Lead is a heavy metal. Its widespread occurrence, relatively simple extraction and | + | <p>Lead is a heavy metal. Its widespread occurrence, the relatively simple extraction methods and several desirable properties have made it useful to humans. Lead and lead compounds are used in a high variety of products, such as pipes and plumbing materials, solders, gasoline, batteries, ammunition and cosmetics. Therefore, lead plays a major role in the industry and is one of the most used metals. But the frequency of occurrence is not as high as that of other metals. Lead can be detected in different parts of the environment, like air, soil and water. |
− | + | A high concentration of lead in drinking water is often induced by obstruct pipes that consist of lead or that has a part of lead, respectively. This allow water to be easily contaminated with the heavy metal. That’s often a problem in houses where lead is used in household plumbing. Due to the fact that lead is also occurring in water, it could results in adverse health effects (WHO: Fact sheet number 379, Lead poisoning and health).</p> | |
− | + | ||
− | Lead | + | |
− | + | ||
<h3>Health Effects</h3> | <h3>Health Effects</h3> | ||
− | <p>Lead has no biological role in the body, but | + | <p>Lead has no biological role in the body, but is a highly poisonous metal. The ingestion of lead could affect almost every organ and system in the body (EPA Health Effects: How Lead Affects the body). The main target for lead toxicity is the nervous system. It can have acute or chronic health effects. The acute health effects are occurring immediately after contact with lead. This can be irritation of the eyes or can lead to headache, irritability, disturbed sleep, and mood as well as personality changes. Exposure to higher lead content over a long-term could cause serious damage to the brain and to the kidneys. The damage can finally cause death (Golub, M. S., 2005). The poisoning is mostly resulting of ingestion of water or food, which is contaminated with lead or lead compounds (Ferner D. J., 2001).It is taken up fast in the bloodstream and spread in the body (Bergeson, 2008). The World Health Organization recommends a limit of 10 µg/L in drinking water, concentrations in drinking water are generally below 5 μg/l. But there are much higher concentrations that have been measured if lead fittings are existing (WHO: Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality,fourth edition). |
− | The poisoning is mostly resulting of ingestion of water or food, which is contaminated with lead or lead compounds (Ferner D. J., 2001).It is taken up fast in the bloodstream and spread in the body(Bergeson, 2008). | + | |
− | The World Health Organization recommends a limit of 10 µg/L in drinking water, concentrations in drinking water are generally below 5 μg/l. But there are much higher concentrations that have been measured if lead fittings are existing (WHO: Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality,fourth edition). | + | |
</p> | </p> | ||
<h3>Detection</h3> | <h3>Detection</h3> | ||
− | <p>Due to the effects on health the detection of lead in drinking water is of importance in all parts of the world. So, a simple system for fast review of the water quality is a worthwhile aim. | + | <p>Due to the effects on health, the detection of lead in drinking water is of importance in all parts of the world. So, a simple system for a fast review of the water quality is a worthwhile aim. The method for detection is currently based on the principle of flame atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS) (Abdallah, A. T. and Moustafa, M. A., 2002). This detection method is difficult to implement in developing countries, and time consuming thus there are hardly any quality standards. |
− | The method for detection is currently on the principle of flame atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS) (Abdallah, A. T. and Moustafa, M. A.,2002). | + | |
− | This detection method is | + | |
</p> | </p> | ||
<h3>Our lead biosensor</h3> | <h3>Our lead biosensor</h3> | ||
− | <p>For our biosensor | + | <p>For our biosensor we use parts of the chromosomal lead operon of <EM>Cupriavidus metallidurans</EM> (<EM>Ralstonia metallidurans</EM>). The promoter that we use is PbrA. This part of the operon is regulated by the repressor pbrR. The PbrR protein mediates Pb<sup>2+</sup>-inducible transcription. PbrR belongs to the MerR family, which are metal-sensing regulatory proteins (Borremans <EM>et al.</EM>, 2001). |
− | Our sensor system comprised PbrR, which is under the control of | + | Our sensor system is comprised of PbrR, which is under the control of a constitutive promoter and PbrA as well as a 5’ untranslated region, which controls the transcription of a sfGFP. The sfGFP protein is the measuring output signal. |
</p> | </p> | ||
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<p id="N.L. Brown et al.2003"> Borremans B., Hobman J. L., Provoost A., Brown N. L., van der Lelie D. (2001), Cloning and Functional Analysis of the pbr Lead Resistance Determinant of Ralstoniametallidurans CH34, J. Bacteriol., 183, 5651 – 5658 | <p id="N.L. Brown et al.2003"> Borremans B., Hobman J. L., Provoost A., Brown N. L., van der Lelie D. (2001), Cloning and Functional Analysis of the pbr Lead Resistance Determinant of Ralstoniametallidurans CH34, J. Bacteriol., 183, 5651 – 5658 | ||
</p> | </p> | ||
+ | <p id="EPA”> EPA Health Effects: How Lead Affects the body, checked on 2015-09-17. </p> | ||
<p id=" Ferner2001"> Ferner D.J., (2001)Toxicity, heavy metals.eMed J.;2(5):1</p> | <p id=" Ferner2001"> Ferner D.J., (2001)Toxicity, heavy metals.eMed J.;2(5):1</p> | ||
<p id=" Golub2005”> Golub, M. S., (2005). "Summary".Metals, fertility, and reproductive toxicity.ISBN 978-0-415-70040-5.</p> | <p id=" Golub2005”> Golub, M. S., (2005). "Summary".Metals, fertility, and reproductive toxicity.ISBN 978-0-415-70040-5.</p> | ||
− | <p id=" | + | <p id="WHO Guidelines for Drinking water”> WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality fourth edition, checked on 2015-09-09. </p> |
− | <p id="WHO”> WHO | + | <p id="WHO”> WHO lead poisoning and health, fact sheet number 379, reviewed August 2015, checked on 2015-09-17. |
</p> | </p> | ||
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<h3>References</h3> | <h3>References</h3> | ||
<div class="references"> | <div class="references"> | ||
− | <p id=" WHO 2005 "> WHO (2005): Mercury in Drinking-water Background document for development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality checked 20.08.15</p> | + | <p id=" WHO 2005 "> WHO (2005): Mercury in Drinking-water Background document for development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking-water Quality, checked 20.08.15</p> |
<p id=" Holmes et al., 2009"> Holmes, P. ; James K.A.F.; Levy, L.S. (2009): Is low-level environmental mercury exposure of concern to human health? In SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT 408 ( 2) pp. 171-182.</p> | <p id=" Holmes et al., 2009"> Holmes, P. ; James K.A.F.; Levy, L.S. (2009): Is low-level environmental mercury exposure of concern to human health? In SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT 408 ( 2) pp. 171-182.</p> | ||
<p id="N.L. Brown et al.2003"> Brown, Nigel L.; Stoyanov, , Jivko V.;Kidd,Stephen P.;Hobman; Jon L. (2003): The MerR family of transcriptional regulators. In FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 27 ( 2) pp.145-163.</p> | <p id="N.L. Brown et al.2003"> Brown, Nigel L.; Stoyanov, , Jivko V.;Kidd,Stephen P.;Hobman; Jon L. (2003): The MerR family of transcriptional regulators. In FEMS Microbiology Reviews, 27 ( 2) pp.145-163.</p> |
Revision as of 19:11, 17 September 2015
Heavy Metals
We detect several heavy metals with a single test strip.
Heavy metals have been part in a lot of iGEM projects over the last years, so why work with them again?
Heavy metals Heavy metals are part of earth’s crust and therefore natural occurring in our environment. (Heavy Metals - Lenntech) In low doses some of them as copper or nickel are even essential trace elements for animals and humans (Rashmi Verma and Pratima Dwivedi 2013). A major problem is their bioaccumulation which leads to toxicity and long term effects which include fatal diseases as cancer (Martin et al. 2009) Parkinson or Alzheimer’s disease (Gaggelli et al. 2006).
Our biosensors We decided to work with already existing well characterized sensors as well as working with established but not well characterized concepts of other teams and moreover created new sensor systems. Therefore we established a basic construction plan for our sensor systems which is based on a promoter with a specific operator region in front of a super folder GFP (sfGFP) that was used for detection trough fluorescence analysis. In addition we used fitting activators or repressors for our inducible promoters under the control of BBa_K608002 which consists of a constitutive promoter with a strong ribosomal binding site (RBS). We combined these into a device consisting of constitutive promoter and RBS reverse and the promoter and operator region in front of the sfGFP. So we have repressor or activator constitutively express but reverse, to minimize background transcription of the inducible system in front of our heavy metal promoter operator system. In addition, these devices are optimized for the usage in a cell free protein synthesis (CFPS). This is the basis for the development of cell free biosensors on a test strip, that can be used to detect several heavy metals at one in the open field.
Detected heavy metals The heavy metal sensors we choose for detection are specific to arsenic, copper, chromium, lead, mercury and nickel. Which concentrations in drinking water are regulated by the WHO, because of their immediate and longtime health effects.
Our motivation We aim to make a use of well characterized sensors as well as concepts and new ideas. All this sensor systems shell work on the same principle, so that we can use them to create a modular easy to handle paper based cell free test strip for detection of more substances, heavy metals in this case, in parallel.
Click on the test strip for more information about the heavy metals and how they can be detected: