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Baraka Gitari Masters Thesis Proposal Part 1 of 3 BACTERIAL CELLULOSE: THE PERFECT MEDIUM 1

Bacterial Cellulose A Perfect Medium

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Baraka GitariMaste rs T hes i s Proposa l Pa r t 1 o f 3

BACTERIAL CELLULOSE: THE PERFECT MEDIUM

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-Goal -History (Literature) - Subcellular processes - Hestrin Schramm Medium with modifications - Extracting cellulose -Plan -Synthesizing -Processing (Extracting, electrospinning) -Characterizing (DSC, SEM, XRD, TGA, OM) -Hurdles -Aseptic procedure

OUTLINE

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GOAL

K.I. Uhlin, R.H. Atalla, N.S. Thompson, Influence of hemicelluloses on the aggregation patterns of bacterial cellulose, Cellulose. 2 (1995) 129–144. doi:10.1007/bf00816385.

P. Wambua, J. Ivens, I. Verpoest, Natural fibres: can they replace glass in fibre reinforced plastics?, Composites Science and Technology. 63 (2003) 1259–1264. doi:10.1016/s0266-3538(03)00096-4.

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- 1,4 β glycosidic bonds- Most abundant natural polymer (115.55 m redwood) (chart from assignment 2)- Biodegradable- Sustainable*

- ht tp : / /p u b s . r s c . o r g / s e r v i c e s / i m a g e s / R S C p u b s . e P l a t f o r m . S e r v i c e . F r e e C o n t e n t . I m a g e S e r v i c e . s v c / I m a g e S e r v i c e / A r t i c l e i m a ge / 2 0 0 6 / C S / b 6 0 1 8 7 2 f / b 6 0 1 8 7 2 f - f 2 . g i f

- h t t p : / / w w w. r i s h . k y o t o - u . a c . j p / W / L B M I / r e s e a r c h / I a i b _ S . j p g

CELLULOSE

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-Intracellular polymerization, extracellular crystallization- Gluconacetobacter xylinus - Bacterial Cellulose Synthase 5 - activated by ci-di-GMP - Substrate UDP-Glucose - BcsA/B/C/D subunits from BcsI and BcsII opersons - Mutations6

- G. xyl inus NBRC 3288,(frameshif t bcsBI and transposon insert ion bcsCII) - K. hansenii ATCC 23769 (IS cel lulose synthase) - Acetobacter tropical is SKU1100 (R to S via single C delet ion or insert ion polE) - complete genome sequencing - Basics of protein function and mechanisms

5 . J . L . W. M o rg a n , J . T. M c n a m a r a , J . Z i m m e r, M e c h a n i s m o f a c t i v a t i o n o f b a c t e r i a l c e l l u l o s e s y n t h a s e b y c y c l i c d i -G M P, N a t S t r u c t M o l B i o l N a t u r e S t r u c t u r a l & A m p ; M o l e c u l a r B i o l o g y. 2 1 ( 2 0 1 4 ) 4 8 9 – 4 9 6 . d o i : 1 0 . 1 0 3 8 / n s m b . 2 8 0 3 .6 . M . M a t s u t a n i , K . I t o , Y. A z u m a , H . O g i n o , M . S h i r a i , T. Ya k u s h i , e t a l . , A d a p t i v e m u t a t i o n r e l a t e d t o c e l l u l o s e p r o d u c i b i l i t y i n K o m a g a t a e i b a c t e r m e d e l l i n e n s i s ( G l u c o n a c e t o b a c t e r x y l i n u s ) N B R C 3 2 8 8 , A p p l M i c r o b i o l B i o t e c h n o l A p p l i e d M i c r o b i o l o g y a n d B i o t e c h n o l o g y. 9 9 ( 2 0 1 5 ) 7 2 2 9 – 7 2 4 0 . d o i : 1 0 . 1 0 0 7 / s 0 0 2 5 3 - 0 1 5 - 6 5 9 8 - x .

HISTORY: SUBCELLULAR

ci-di-GMP UDP-Glucose

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7 . K . J i , W. Wa n g , B . Z e n g , S . C h e n , Q . Z h a o , Y. C h e n , e t a l . , B a c t e r i a l c e l l u l o s e s y n t h e s i s m e c h a n i s m o f f a c u l t a t i v e a n a e r o b e E n t e r o b a c t e r s p . F Y- 0 7 , S c i . R e p . S c i e n t i f i c R e p o r t s . 6 ( 2 0 1 6 ) 2 1 8 6 3 . d o i : 1 0 . 1 0 3 8 / s r e p 2 1 8 6 3 .

HISTORY: SUBCELLULAR

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75 . J .L .W. Morgan , J .T. Mcnamara , J . Z immer, Mechanism of ac t iva t ion of bac te r ia l ce l lu lose syn thase by cyc l ic d i -GMP, Na t S t ruc t Mol Bio l Na ture S t ruc tura l &Amp; Molecu la r Bio logy. 21 (2014) 489–496 . do i :10 .1038/nsmb.2803

HISTORY: SUBCELLULAR

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- Hestrin Schramm Medium 8 (1954) (% w/v)

- glucose 2 .0 - bactopeptone 0 .5 - yeas t ex t ract 0 .5 - d i -sodium hydrogen phosphate * Na 2 HPO 4 0 .27 - ci t r i c ac id* 0 .12 - s ta r t ing pH 6 .0- Modifications -sugars (sucrose , f ruc tose) - Alcohols -micronut r ien ts (P, S , K, Mg, Ca , Fe) - an t ioxidants ( l ignosul fonate) - pH 8 . M . S c h r a m m , S . H e s t r i n , Fa c t o r s a ff e c t i n g P ro d u c t i o n o f C e l l u l o s e a t t h e A i r / L i q u i d I n t e r f a c e o f a C u l t u re o f Ac e t o b a c t e r x y l i n u m , J o u rn a l o f G e n e r a l M i c ro b i o l o g y. 11 (1 954 ) 123– 129 . d o i : 10 . 109 9 / 0022 1287 - 11 - 1 - 123 .

h t t p s : / / n d b . n a l . u s d a . g o v / n d b / f o o d s / s h o w / 873 4? f o rm a t = Fu l l & re p o r t f m t = p d f & p d f Q vs = % 7B % 7D

HISTORY: GROWTH MEDIUM

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9A. Kurosumi, C. Sasaki, Y. Yamashita, Y. Nakamura, Utilization of various fruit juices as carbon source for production of bacterial cellulose by Acetobacter xylinum NBRC 13693, Carbohydrate Polymers. 76 (2009) 333–335. doi:10.1016/j.carbpol.2008.11.009.

Micronutrient Orange Juice Pineapple Juice

Calcium 10.89 mg 13 mgIron 0.20 mg 0.29 mgMagnesium 10.89 mg 12 mgPotassium 200 mg 109 mg

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Cellulose Specialty Uses

https://phy214uhart.wikispaces.com/Capacitors

1. K.-Y. Lee, J.J. Blaker, R. Murakami, J.Y.Y. Heng, A. Bismarck, Phase Behavior of Medium and High Internal Phase Water-in-Oil Emulsions Stabilized Solely by Hydrophobized Bacterial Cellulose Nanofibrils, Langmuir. 30 (2014) 452–460. doi:10.1021/la4032514.

2. M.Ö. Seydibeyoğlu, M. Misra, A. Mohanty, J.J. Blaker, K.-Y. Lee, A. Bismarck, et al., Green polyurethane nanocomposites from soy polyol and bacterial cellulose, J Mater Sci Journal of Materials Science. 48 (2012) 2167–2175. doi:10.1007/s10853-012-6992-z.

3. K.-Y. Lee, H. Qian, F.H. Tay, J.J. Blaker, S.G. Kazarian, A. Bismarck, Bacterial cellulose as source for activated nanosized carbon for electric double layer capacitors, J Mater Sci Journal of Materials Science. 48 (2012) 367–376. doi:10.1007/s10853-012-6754-y.

1

2

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http://www.rubber-silanes.com/product/rubber-silanes/en/effects/reinforcement/pages/default.aspx

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TA B L E 2 . 0 I N I T I A L I N V E S T M E N T

Material Cost (per experiment)peptone 68971-500G-F $128 (0.64)

yeast extract Y1625-250G $60.70 (0.61)

di-sodium hydrogen phosphate 71640-250G

$31.00 (0.17)

Resazurin R7017-1G $33.90 (0.03)

Ammonium sulfate A4418-500G $87.60 (0.219)

Gluconacetobacter xylinus $554.00 (once*)

Bunsen Bruner $55.00 (once)

Maple Syrup (Grade B) $38.77 (0.116)

Inoculation loop $145 (once)70% ethanol 02877-1L $62.10 (1.5525)Total $1 133.97 (3.34)

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TA B L E 1 .0 GR OWT H MEDIUM SOU R CE AN D B AC TE R IA L FUNC T IONElement Medium Source Function

Carbon -Grade B Maple Syrup-peptone, yeast extract

- Backbone of organic molecules

Oxygen -Oxygen in air- organic compounds

- Last acceptor in ETC- Organic molecules

Nitrogen - Peptone,- Yeast extract - Ammonium sulfate

- Proteins- Nucleic acids- Coenzymes

Hydrogen -organic compounds- H2 in air

-Organic molecules

Phosphorous - Na2HPO4   (di-sodium hydrogen phosphate)

-Nucleic acids-Phospholipids- Lipopolysaccharides (LPS)

Sulfur NH4SO4 - Amino Acids with Sulfur- Coenzyme

Potassium -Grade B Maple Syrup -intracellular cation-cytoplasmic signaling-incorporation of sulfur into protein- Cofactor (pyruvate kinase)

Magnesium -Grade B Maple Syrup - Cofactor (pyruvate kinase)- Stabilizes (ATP, nucleic acids, RNA, membrane)

Calcium -Grade B Maple Syrup - Intracellular signaling hypothesized

Iron -Grade B Maple Syrup - Cytochrome ETC

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PLAN: EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE

autoclave Bunsen burner

Shaker ΔT

53524

centrifuge

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- Aseptic procedure - c l ea n b en c h -Au t oc l a v e ( 12 1 - 14 0 o C 2 - 3 0 m in u t e s 1 5 - 3 0 ps i ) - 7 0 % e th a no l - B u n se n bu r n e r - c on v e c t i o n cu r ren t - h ea t i n g i n oc u l a t i o n l o op , n ec k s o f b o t t l e s

-Monitor ing - c e l l n u mbe r - p H - g lu c o se , g l u co n i c ac id , b y p r o du c t c on c e n t ra t i o n , c e l l u lo s e p r od u c t i on

-P in p o in t i n g me d iu m co mp o s i t i o n / c o nc e n t ra t i on

h t t p : / / w w w. e x p l a i n t h a t s t u f f . c o m / a u t o c l a v e s . h t m l h t t p : / /w w w. s t e r i l i z e r s . c o m / a u t o c l a v e - t i m e - t e m p e r a t u r e - p r e s s u r e - c h a r t . h t m l

Ta b l e 1 . 0 X . Z e n g , D . P. S m a l l , W. Wa n , S t a t i s t i c a l o p t i m i z a t i o n o f c u l t u re c o n d i t i o n s f o r b a c t e r i a l c e l l u l o s e p ro d u c t i o n b y A c e t o b a c t e r x y l i n u m B P R 2 0 0 1 f ro m m a p l e s y r u p , C a r b o h y d r a t e Po l y m e r s . 8 5 ( 2 0 1 1 ) 5 0 6 – 5 1 3 . d o i : 1 0 . 1 0 1 6 / j . c a r b p o l . 2 0 1 1 . 0 2 . 0 3 4 .

HURDLES