Spent nuclear fuel (SNF) pool is an essential unit of a nuclear power plant infrastructure, where radioactive fuel rods are kept for cooling and shielding, before reprocessing. This study explored the presence of bacteria in SNF pool water with emphasis on their capability to form biofilms on pool wall cladding material stainless steel (SS-304L). Bacteria were isolated from SNF pool water and were characterized using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The six bacterial isolates (Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus sps., S. arlettae, S. epidermidis, S. auricularis and Chryseobacterium gleum) can grow and form biofilms at very low nutrient condition as well as in chronic radioactivity. The bacterial isolates formed biofilm on SS-304L and glass. However, the biofilm parameters assessed by CLSM microscopy showed that the strains preferred SS-304L surface for biofilm formation. On SS-304L, the maximum biomass (0.45 l μm/l μm) was formed by S. arlettae when compared to maximum biomass (0.054 l μm/l μm2) by Staphylococcus sp., on glass. Maximum biofilm thickness on SS- 304L was observed by Staphylococcus sp. (8.81 l μm) when compared to that of S. epidermidis (4.16 l μm) on the glass surface. The biofilm formation on SS-304L surface suggests the possible risk of microbial-induced corrosion of SNF pool cladding material. This study highlights the need for mandatory monitoring of microbial biofilm formation in an extreme environment such as SNF pool.
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mSystems
December 2024
Limnological Station, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Unlabelled: Segregation and mixing shape the structure and functioning of aquatic microbial communities, but their respective roles are challenging to disentangle in field studies. We explored the hypothesis that functional differences and beta diversity among stochastically assembled communities would increase in the absence of dispersal. Contrariwise, we expected biotic selection during homogenizing dispersal to reduce beta and gamma diversity as well as functional variability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
August 2024
Department of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Repetitive synaptic stimulation can induce different forms of synaptic plasticity but may also limit the robustness of synaptic transmission by exhausting key resources. Little is known about how synaptic transmission is stabilized after high-frequency stimulation. In the present study, we observed that tetanic stimulation of the Drosophila neuromuscular junction (NMJ) decreases quantal content, release-ready vesicle pool size and synaptic vesicle density for minutes after stimulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2024
Department of Materials, Complex Materials, ETH Zürich, Zürich 8093, Switzerland.
Nature is home to a variety of microorganisms that create materials under environmentally friendly conditions. While this offers an attractive approach for sustainable manufacturing, the production of materials by native microorganisms is usually slow and synthetic biology tools to engineer faster microorganisms are only available when prior knowledge of genotype-phenotype links is available. Here, we utilize a high-throughput directed evolution platform to enhance the fitness of whole microorganisms under selection pressure and identify genetic pathways to enhance the material production capabilities of native species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
June 2024
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka-1000, Bangladesh.
Background: The Alternative Lengthening of Telomeres (ALT) pathway represents a non-canonical mechanism of telomere maintenance that operates independently of the conventional telomerase activity. The three biologically significant proteins, designated as SMARCAL1 (SWI/SNF-related matrix-associated actin-dependent regulator of chromatin subfamily A-like protein 1), DAXX (Death domain-associated protein 6) and ATRX (alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation, X-linked) are associated with ALT in certain cancer types. The purpose of this study was to identify the most high-risk nsSNPs (non-synonymous Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms) within these three genes and assess their impacts on the structure and function of the proteins they encode.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2024
Department of Biochemistry, University of Zürich, Zürich CH-8057, Switzerland.
Establishing modular binders as diagnostic detection agents represents a cost- and time-efficient alternative to the commonly used binders that are generated one molecule at a time. In contrast to these conventional approaches, a modular binder can be designed in silico from individual modules to, in principle, recognize any desired linear epitope without going through a selection and hit-validation process, given a set of preexisting, amino acid-specific modules. Designed armadillo repeat proteins (dArmRP) have been developed as modular binder scaffolds, and we report here the generation of highly specific dArmRP modules by yeast surface display selection, performed on a rationally designed dArmRP library.
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