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Bioremediation of radioactive waste

Bioremediation of radioactive waste or bioremediation of radionuclides is an application of bioremediation based on the use of biological agents bacteria, plants and fungi (natural or genetically modified) to catalyze chemical reactions that allow the decontamination of sites affected by radionuclides.[1] These radioactive particles are by-products generated as a result of activities related to nuclear energy and constitute a pollution and a radiotoxicity problem (with serious health and ecological consequences) due to its unstable nature of ionizing radiation emissions.

The techniques of bioremediation of environmental areas as soil, water and sediments contaminated by radionuclides are diverse and currently being set up as an ecological and economic alternative to traditional procedures. Physico-chemical conventional strategies are based on the extraction of waste by excavating and drilling, with a subsequent long-range transport for their final confinement. These works and transport have often unacceptable estimated costs of operation that could exceed a trillion dollars in the US and 50 million pounds in the UK.[2]

The species involved in these processes have the ability to influence the properties of radionuclides such as solubility, bioavailability and mobility to accelerate its stabilization. Its action is largely influenced by electron donors and acceptors, nutrient medium, complexation of radioactive particles with the material and environmental factors. These are measures that can be performed on the source of contamination (in situ) or in controlled and limited facilities in order to follow the biological process more accurately and combine it with other systems (ex situ).[3][4]

Areas contaminated by radioactivity

Typology of radionuclides and polluting waste

The presence of radioactive waste in the environment may cause long-term effects due to the activity and half-life of the radionuclides, leading their impact to grow with time.[2] These particles exist in various oxidation states and are found as oxides, coprecipitates, or as organic or inorganic complexes, according to their origin and ways of liberation. Most commonly they are found in oxidized form, which makes them more soluble in water and thus more mobile.[4] Unlike organic contaminants, however, they cannot be destroyed and must be converted into a stable form or extracted from the environment.[5]

The sources of radioactivity are not exclusive of human activity. The natural radioactivity does not come from human sources: it covers up to ¾ of the total radioactivity in the world and has its origins in the interaction of terrestrial elements with high energy cosmic rays (cosmogenic radionuclides) or in the existing materials on Earth since its formation (primordial radionuclides). In this regard, there are differences in the levels of radioactivity throughout the Earth's crust. India and mountains like the Alps are among the areas with the highest level of natural radioactivity due to their composition of rocks and sand.[6]

The most frequent radionuclides in soils are naturally radium-226 (226Ra), radon-222 (222Rn), thorium-232 (232Th), uranium-238 (238U) and potassium-40 (40K). Potassium-40 (up to 88% of total activity), carbon-14 (14C), radium-226, uranium-238 and rubidium-87 (87Rb) are found in ocean waters. Moreover, in groundwater abound radius radioisotopes such as radium-226 and radium-228 (228Ra).[7][8] They are also habitual in building materials radionuclides of uranium, thorium and potassium (the latter common to wood).[8]

At the same time, anthropogenic radionuclides (caused by humans) are due to thermonuclear reactions resulting from explosions and nuclear weapons tests, discharges from nuclear facilities, accidents deriving from the reprocessing of commercial fuel, waste storage from these processes and to a lesser extent, nuclear medicine.[9] Some polluted sites by these radionuclides are the US DOE facilities (like Hanford Site), the Chernobyl and Fukushima exclusion zones and the affected area of Chelyabinsk Oblast due to the Kyshtym disaster.

In ocean waters, the presence of tritium (3H), cesium-137 (137Cs), strontium-90 (90Sr), plutonium-239 (239Pu) and plutonium-240 (240Pu) has significantly increased due to anthropogenic causes.[10][11] In soils, technetium-99 (99Tc), carbon-14, strontium-90, cobalt-60 (60Co), iodine-129 (129I), iodine-131 (131I), americium-241 (241Am), neptunium-237 (237Np) and various forms of radioactive plutonium and uranium are the most common radionuclides.[2][8][9]

Frequency of occurrence of selected radionuclides at US DOE facilities
Ground water Soils/Sediments
Source: United States Department of Energy, US Government (1992)[12]

The classification of radioactive waste established by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) distinguishes six levels according to equivalent dose, specific activity, heat released and half-life of the radionuclides:[13]

  • Exempt waste (EW): Waste that meets the criteria for exclusion from regulatory control for radiation protection purposes.
  • Very short lived waste (VSLW): Waste with very short half-lives (often used for research and medical purposes) that can be stored over a limited period of up to a few years and subsequently cleared from regulatory control.
  • Very low level waste (VLLW): Waste like soil and rubble (with low levels of activity concentration) that may also contain other hazardous waste.
  • Low level waste (LLW): Waste that is above clearance levels and requires robust isolation and containment for periods of up to a few hundred years and is suitable for disposal in engineered near surface facilities. LLW include short lived radionuclides at higher levels of activity concentration and also long lived radionuclides, but only at relatively low levels of activity concentration.
  • Intermediate level waste (ILW): Waste with long lived radionuclides that requires a greater degree of containment and isolation at greater depths.
  • High level waste (HLW): Waste with large amounts of long lived radionuclides that need to be stored in deep, stable geological formations usually several hundred metres or more below the surface.

Ecological and human health consequences

Radioactive contamination is a potential danger for living organisms and results in external hazards, concerning radiation sources outside the body, and internal dangers, as a result of the incorporation of radionuclides inside the body (often by inhalation of particles or ingestion of contaminated food).[14]

In humans, single doses from 0.25 Sv produce first anomalies in the amount of leukocytes. This effect is accentuated if the absorbed dose is between 0.5 and 2 Sv, in whose first damage, nausea and hair loss are suffered. The strip ranging between 2 and 5 Sv is considered the most serious and include bleeding, ulcers and risk of death; values exceeding 5 Sv involve immediate death.[14] If radiation, likewise, is received in small doses over long periods of time, the consequences can be equally severe. It is difficult to quantify the health effects for doses below 10 mSv, but it has been shown that there is a direct relationship between prolonged exposure and cancer risk (although there is not a very clear dose-response relationship to establish clear limits of exposure).[15]

The information available on the effect of natural background radiation with respect anthropogenic pollution on wildlife is scarce and refers to very few species. It is very difficult to estimate from the available data the total doses that can accumulate during specific stages of the life cycle (embryonic development or reproductive age), in changes in behavior or depending on environmental factors such as seasonality.[16] The phenomena of radioactive bioaccumulation, bioconcentration and biomagnification, however, are especially known to sea level. They are caused by the recruitment and retention of radioisotopes by bivalves, crustaceans, corals and phytoplankton, which then amounted to the rest of the food chain at low concentration factors.[17]

Radiobiological literature and IAEA establish a safe limit of absorbed dose of 0.001 Gy/d for terrestrial animals and 0.01 Gy/d for plants and marine biota, although this limit should be reconsidered for long-lived species with low reproductive capacity.[18]

 
1909 study in which the effect of exposure to radioactive radium on lupins is shown. The radiological activity was the same for all seedlings, but not the duration of exposure (descending from left to right, the fourth as control). Those exposed for longer suffered more damage and higher growth and germination deficiences.[19]

Radiation tests in model organisms that determine the effects of high radiation on animals and plants are:[18]

The effects of radioactivity on bacteria are given, as in eukaryotes, by ionization of water and production of reactive oxygen species. These compounds mutate DNA strands and produce genetic damage, inducing newly lysis and subsequent cell death.[20][21]

Its action on viruses, on the other hand, results in damaged nucleic acids and viral inactivation.[22] They have a sensory threshold ranging between 1000 and 10,000 Gy (range occupying most biological organisms) which decreases with increasing genome size.[23]

Bacterial bioremediation

The biochemical transformation of radionuclides into stable isotopes by bacterial species significantly differs from the metabolism of organic compounds coming from carbon sources. They are highly energetic radioactive forms which can be converted indirectly by the process of microbial energy transfer.[1]

Radioisotopes can be transformed directly through changes in valence state by acting as acceptors or by acting as cofactors to enzymes. They can also be transformed indirectly by reducing and oxidizing agents produced by microorganisms that cause changes in pH or redox potential. Other processes include precipitation and complexation of surfactants, or chelating agents that bind to radioactive elements. Human intervention, on the other hand, can improve these processes through genetic engineering and omics, or by injection of microorganisms or nutrients into the treatment area.[1][5]

Bioreduction

According to the radioactive element and the specific site conditions, bacteria can enzymatically immobilize radionuclides directly or indirectly. Their redox potential is exploited by some microbial species to carry out reductions that alter the solubility and hence, mobility, bioavailability and radiotoxicity. This waste treatment technique called bioreduction or enzymatic biotransformation is very attractive because it can be done in mild conditions for the environment, does not produce hazardous secondary waste and has potential as a solution for waste of various kinds.[4]

 
Depiction of direct enzymatic reduction. Microorganisms use organic compounds as lactate, acetate or formate as electron donors to reduce and leave radionuclides in insoluble form.[2]

Direct enzymatic reduction is the change of radionuclides of a higher oxidation state to a lower one made by facultative and obligate anaerobes. The radioisotope interact with binding sites of metabolically active cells and is used as terminal electron acceptor in the electron transport chain where compounds such as ethyl lactate act as electron donors under anaerobic respiration.[4]

The periplasm plays a very important role in these bioreductions. In the reduction of uranium (VI) to insoluble uranium (IV), made by Shewanella putrefaciens, Desulfovibrio vulgaris, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans and Geobacter sulfurreducens, the activity of periplasmic cytochromes is required. The reduction of technetium (VII) to technetium (IV) made by S. putrefaciens, G. sulfurreducens, D. desulfuricans, Geobacter metallireducens and Escherichia coli, on the other hand, requires the presence of the complex formate hydrogenlyase, also placed in this cell compartment.[2]

Other radioactive actinides such as thorium, plutonium, neptunium and americium are enzymatically reduced by Rhodoferax ferrireducens, S. putrefaciens and several species of Geobacter, and directly form an insoluble mineral phase.[2]

The phenomenon of indirect enzymatic reduction is carried out by sulfate-reducing and dissimilatory metal-reducing bacteria on excretion reactions of metabolites and breakdown products. There is a coupling of the oxidation of organic acids —produced by the excretion of these heterotrophic bacteria— with the reduction of iron or other metals and radionuclides, which forms insoluble compounds that can precipitate as oxide and hydroxide minerals. In the case of sulfate-reducing bacteria hydrogen sulfide is produced, promoting increased solubility of polluting radionuclides and their bioleaching (as liquid waste that can then be recovered).[2][4]

There are several species of reducing microorganisms that produce indirect sequestering agents and specific chelators, such as siderophores. These sequestering agents are crucial in the complexation of radionuclides and increasing their solubility and bioavailability. Microbacterium flavescens, for example, grows in the presence of radioisotopes such as plutonium, thorium, uranium or americium and produces organic acids and siderophores that allow the dissolution and mobilization of radionuclides through the soil. It seems that siderophores on bacterial surface could also facilitate the entry of these elements within the cell as well. Pseudomonas aeruginosa also secretes chelating agents out that meet uranium and thorium when grown in a medium with these elements. In general, it has also been found that enterobactin siderophores are extremely effective in solubilizing actinide oxides of plutonium.[2][4]

Citrate complexes

Citrate is a chelator which binds to certain transition metals and radioactive actinides. Stable complexes such as bidentate, tridentate (ligands with more than one atom bound) and polynuclear complexes (with several radioactive atoms) can be formed with citrate and radionuclides, which receive a microbial action. Anaerobically, Desulfovibrio desulfuricans and species of the genera Shewanella and Clostridium are able to reduce bidentate complexes of uranyl-citrate (VI) to uranyl-citrate (IV) and make them precipitate, despite not being able to degrade metabolically complexed citrate at the end of the process.[2] In denitrifying and aerobic conditions, however, it has been determined that it is not possible to reduce or degrade these uranium complexes. Bioreduction do not get a head when they are citrate complex mixed metal complexes or when they are tridentate, monomeric or polynuclear complexes, since they become recalcitrant and persistent in the environment.[4][24] From this knowledge exists a system that combines the degradation of radionuclide-citrate complex with subsequent photodegradation of remaining reduced uranyl-citrate (previously not biodegradated but sensitive to light), which allows for stable precipitates of uranium and also of thorium, strontium or cobalt from contaminated lands.[4]

Biosorption, bioaccumulation and biomineralization

 
Biosorption, bioaccumulation and biomineralization strategies with a specific role for each cell compartment.[3]

The set of strategies that comprise biosorption, bioaccumulation and biomineralization are closely related to each other, because one way or another have a direct contact between the cell and radionuclide. These mechanisms are evaluated accurately using advanced analysis technologies such as electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and XANES, EXAFS and X-ray spectroscopies.[1][25]

Biosorption and bioaccumulation are two metabolic actions that are based on the ability to concentrate radionuclides over a thousand times the concentration of the environment. They consist of complexation of radioactive waste with phosphates, organic compounds and sulfites so that they become insoluble and less exposed to radiotoxicity. They are particularly useful in biosolids for agricultural purposes and soil amendments, although most properties of these biosolids are unknown.[26]

Biosorption method is based on passive sequestration of positively charged radioisotopes by lipopolysaccharides (LPS) on the cell membrane (negatively charged), either live or dead bacteria. Its efficiency is directly related to the increase in temperature and can last for hours, being a much faster method than direct bioreduction. It occurs through the formation of slimes and capsules, and with a preference for binding to the phosphate and phosphoryl groups (although it also occurs with carboxyl, amine or sulfhydryl groups). Bacillota and other bacteria like Citrobacter freudii have significant biosorption capabilities; Citrobacter does it through electrostatic interaction of uranium with phosphates of their LPS.[2][3]

Quantitative analyzes determine that, in the case of uranium, biosorption may vary within a range between 45 and 615 milligrams per gram of cell dry weight. However, it is a technique that requires a high amount of biomass to affect bioremediation; it presents problems of saturation and other cations that compete for binding to the bacterial surface.[3]

Bioaccumulation refers to uptake of radionuclides into the cell, where they are retained by complexations with negatively charged intracellular components, precipitation or granules formations. Unlike biosorption, this is an active process: it depends on an energy-dependent transport system.[citation needed] Some metals or radionuclides can be absorbed by bacteria accidentally because of its resemblance to dietary elements for metabolic pathways. Several radioisotopes of strontium, for example, are recognized as analogs of calcium and incorporated within Micrococcus luteus.[4] Uranium, however, has no known function and is believed that its entry into the cell interior may be due to its toxicity (it is able to increase membrane permeability).[3]

 
Chernikovite and meta-autunite, radioactive minerals result of possible biomineralization.

Furthermore, biomineralization —also known as bioprecipitation— is the precipitation of radionuclides through the generation of microbial ligands, resulting in the formation of stable biogenic minerals. These minerals have a very important role in the retention of radioactive contaminants. A very localized and produced enzymatically ligand concentration is involved and provides a nucleation site for the onset of biomineral precipitation.[27] This is particularly relevant in precipitations of phosphatase activity-derivate biominerals, which cleavage molecules such as glycerol phosphate on periplasm. In Citrobacter and Serratia genera, this cleavage liberates inorganic phosphates (HPO42−) that precipitates with uranyl ion (UO22+) and cause deposition of polycrystalline minerals around the cell wall.[2][28] Serratia also form biofilms that promote precipitation of chernikovite (rich in uranium) and additionally, remove up to 85% of cobalt-60 and 97% of cesium-137 by proton substitution of this mineral.[25] In general, biomineralization is a process in which the cells do not have limitations of saturation and can accumulate up to several times its own weight as precipitated radionuclides.[4]

Investigations of terrestrial and marine bacterial isolates belonging to the genera Aeromonas, Bacillus, Myxococcus, Pantoea, Pseudomonas, Rahnella and Vibrio have also demonstrated the removal of uranium radioisotopes as phosphate biominerals in both oxic and anoxic growth conditions.[25]

Biostimulation and bioaugmentation

 
Evolution of the Old Rifle UMTRA Site (Colorado, US) from 1957 (above) until 2008 (below), in which biostimulation tasks were carried out.[29]

Aside from bioreduction, biosorption, bioaccumulation and biomineralization, which are bacterial strategies for natural attenuation of radioactive contamination, there are also human methods that increase the efficiency or speed of microbial processes. This accelerated natural attenuation involves an intervention in the contaminated area to improve conversion rates of radioactive waste, which tend to be slow. There are two variants: biostimulation and bioaugmentation.[30]

Biostimulation is the addition of nutrients with trace elements, electron donors or electron acceptors to stimulate activity and growth of natural indigenous microbial communities.[4][30] It can range from simple fertilization or infiltration (called passive biostimulation) to more aggressive injections to the ground, and is widely used at US DOE sites.[26] Nitrate is used as nutrient to biostimulate the reduction of uranium, because it serves as very energetically favorable electron acceptor for metal-reducing bacteria. However, many of these microorganisms (Geobacter, Shewanella or Desulfovibrio) exhibit resistance genes to heavy metals that limit their ability to bioremediate radionuclides. In these particular cases, a carbon source such as ethanol is added to the medium to promote the reduction of nitrate at first, and then of uranium. Ethanol is also used in soil injection systems with hydraulic recirculations: it raises the pH and promotes the growth of denitrifying and radionuclide-reducing bacteria, that produce biofilms and achieve almost 90% decrease in the concentration of radioactive uranium.[2]

A number of geophysical techniques have been used to monitor the effects of in situ biostimulation trials including measurement of: spectral ionization potential, self potentials, current density, complex resistivity and also reactive transport modelling (RTM), which measures hydrogeological and geochemical parameters to estimate chemical reactions of the microbial community.[3]

Bioaugmentaton, on the other hand, is the deliberated addition to the environment of microorganisms with desired traits to accelerate bacterial metabolic conversion of radioactive waste. They are often added when necessary species for bioremediation do not exist in the treatment place.[4][30] This technique has shown in field trials over the years that it does not offer better results than biostimulation; neither it is clear that introduced species can be distributed effectively through the complex geological structures of most subsurface environments or that can compete long term with the indigenous microbiota.[1][26]

Genetic engineering and omics

 
Deinococcus radiodurans has much interest in genetic engineering for bioremediation of radioactive waste.

Omics, especially genomics and proteomics, allow identifying and evaluating genes, proteins and enzymes involved in radionuclide bioremediation, apart from the structural and functional interactions that exist between them and other metabolites. Genome sequencing of various microorganisms has uncovered, for example, that Geobacter sulfurreducens possess more than 100 coding regions for c-type cytochromes involved in bioremediation radionuclide, or that NiCoT gene is significantly overexpressed in Rhodopseudomonas palustris and Novosphingobium aromaticivorans when grown in medium with radioactive cobalt.[1][2]

From this information, different genetic engineering and recombinant DNA techniques are being developed to generate specific bacteria for bioremediation. Some constructs expressed in microbial species are phytochelatins, polyhistidines and other polypeptides by fusion-binding domains to outer-membrane-anchored proteins.[2] Some of these genetically modified strains are derived from Deinococcus radiodurans, one of the most radiation-resistant organisms. D. radiodurans is capable to resist oxidative stress and DNA damage from radiation, and reduces technetium, uranium and chromium naturally as well. Besides, through insertion of genes from other species it has been achieved that it can also precipitates uranyl phosphates and degrades mercury by using toluene as an energy source to grow and stabilize other priority radionuclides.[1][3]

Directed evolution of bacterial proteins related to bioremediation of radionuclides is also a field research. YieF enzyme, for example, naturally catalyzes the reduction of chromium with a very wide range of substrates. Following protein engineering, however, it has also been able to participate in uranyl ion reduction.[31]

Plant bioremediation

 
Phytoremediation processes. Radionuclides can not be phytodegraded but converted to more stable or less toxic forms.

The use of plants to remove contaminants from the environment or to render them less harmful is called phytoremediation. In the case of radionuclides, it is a viable technology when decontamination times are long and waste are scattered at low concentrations.[32][33]

Some plant species are able to transform the state of radioisotopes (without suffering toxicity) concentrating them in different parts of their structure, making them rush through the roots, making them volatile or stabilizing them on the ground. As in bacteria, plant genetic engineering procedures and biostimulation —called phytostimulation— have improved and accelerate these processes, particularly with regard to fast-growing plants.[33] The use of Agrobacterium rhizogenes, for example, is quite widespread and significantly increases radionuclide uptake by the roots.[citation needed]

Phytoextraction

In phytoextraction (also phytoaccumulation, phytosequesteration or phytoabsorption)[34] plants carry radioactive waste from the root system to the vascular tissue and become concentrated in the biomass of shoots. It is a technique that removes radionuclides without destroying the soil structure, with minimal impact on soil fertility and valid for large areas with a low level of radioactivity. Its efficiency is evaluated through bioaccumulation coefficient (BC) or total removal of radionuclides per m2, and is proven to attract cesium-137, strontium-90, technetium-99, cerium-144, plutonium-240, americium-241, neptunium-237 and various radioisotopes of thorium and radium.[33] By contrast, it requires large biomass production in short periods of time.[citation needed]

Species like common heather or amaranths are able to concentrate cesium-137, the most abundant radionuclide in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. In this region of Ukraine, mustard greens could remove up to 22% of average levels of cesium activity in a single growing season. In the same way, bok choy and mustard greens can concentrate 100 times more uranium than other species.[33]

Rhizofiltration

 
Connected pond system at River Dearne (England).

Rhizofiltration is the adsorption and precipitation of radionuclides in plant roots or absorption thereof if soluble in effluents. It has great efficiency in the treatment of cesium-137 and strontium-90, particularly by algae and aquatic plants, such as Cladophora and Elodea genera, respectively. It is the most efficient strategy for bioremediation technologies in wetlands,[34] but must have a continuous and rigorous control of pH to make it an optimal process.[35]

From this process, some strategies have been designed based on sequences of ponds with a slow flow of water to clean polluted water with radionuclides. The results of these facilities, for flows of 1000 liters of effluent are about 95% retention of radiation in the first pond (by plants and sludge), and over 99% in three-base systems.[33]

The most promising plants for rhizofiltration are sunflowers. They are able to remove up to 95% of uranium of contaminated water in 24 hours, and experiments in Chernobyl have demonstrated that they can concentrate on 55 kg of plant dry weight all the cesium and strontium radioactivity from an area of 75 m2 (stabilized material suitable for transfer to a nuclear waste repository).[33]

Phytovolatilization

Phytovolatilization involves the capture and subsequent transpiration of radionuclides into the atmosphere. It does not remove contaminants but releases them in volatile form (less harmful). Despite not having too many applications for radioactive waste, it is very useful for the treatment of tritium, because it exploits plants' ability to transpire enormous amounts of water.[33][34]

The treatment applied to tritium (shielded by air produces almost no external radiation exposure, but its incorporation in water presents a health hazard when absorbed into the body) uses polluted effluents to irrigate phreatophytes. It becomes a system with a low operation cost and low maintenance, with savings of about 30% in comparison to conventional methods of pumping and covering with asphalt.[33]

Phytostabilization

Phytostabilization is an specially valid strategy for radioactive contamination based on the immobilization of radionuclides in the soil by the action of the roots. This can occur by adsorption, absorption and precipitation within root zone, and ensures that radioactive waste can not be dispersed because soil erosion or leaching. It is useful in controlling tailings from strip and open pit uranium mines, and guarantees to retrieve the ecosystem.[33][34] However, it has significant drawbacks such as large doses of fertilizer needed to reforest the area, apart from radioactive source (which implies long-term maintenance) remaining at the same place.[citation needed]

Fungal bioremediation

 
Radiotrophic fungi growth has been described in reactor 4 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station.

Several fungi species have radioactive resistance values equal to or greater than more radioresistant bacteria; they perform mycoremediation processes. It was reported that some fungi had the ability of growing into, feeding, generating spores and decomposing pieces of graphite from destroyed reactor No. 4 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station, which is contaminated with high concentrations of cesium, plutonium and cobalt radionuclides. They were called radiotrophic fungi.[36]

Since then, it has been shown that some species of Penicillium, Cladosporium, Paecilomyces and Xerocomus are able to use ionizing radiation as energy through the electronic properties of melanins.[36][37] In their feeding they bioaccumulate radioisotopes, creating problems on concrete walls of deep geological repositories.[38] Other fungi like oyster mushrooms can bioremediate plutonium-239 and americium-241.[39]

Ways of research

Current research on bioremediation techniques is fairly advanced and molecular mechanisms that govern them are well known. However, there are many doubts about the effectiveness and possible adversities of these processes in combination with the addition of agrochemicals. In soils, the role of mycorrhizae on radioactive waste is poorly described and sequestration patterns of radionuclides are not known with certainty.[40]

Longevity effects of some bacterial processes, such as maintenance of uranium in insoluble form because of bioreductions or biomineralizations, are unknown. There are not clear details about the electronic transfer from some radionuclides with these bacterial species either.[3]

Another important aspect is the change of ex situ or laboratory scale processes to their real application in situ, in which soil heterogeneity and environmental conditions generate reproduction deficiencies of optimal biochemical status of the used species, a fact that decreases the efficiency. This implies finding what are the best conditions in which to carry out an efficient bioremediation with anions, metals, organic compounds or other chelating radionuclides that can compete with the uptake of interest radioactive waste.[2] Nevertheless, in many cases research is focused on the extraction of soil and water and its ex situ biological treatment to avoid these problems.[4]

Finally, the potential of GMOs is limited by regulatory agencies in terms of responsibility and bioethical issues. Their release require support on the action zone and comparability with indigenous species. Multidisciplinary research is focused on defining more precisely necessary genes and proteins to establish new cell-free systems, which may avoid possible side effects on the environment by the intrusion of transgenic or invasive species.[2]

See also

References

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External links

  • Dengra Grau, F. Xavier. Bioremediation of radioactive waste. (PDF) Scientific poster of the Bachelor Thesis related to this article. Autonomous University of Barcelona Digital Repository of Documents.

bioremediation, radioactive, waste, bioremediation, radionuclides, application, bioremediation, based, biological, agents, bacteria, plants, fungi, natural, genetically, modified, catalyze, chemical, reactions, that, allow, decontamination, sites, affected, ra. Bioremediation of radioactive waste or bioremediation of radionuclides is an application of bioremediation based on the use of biological agents bacteria plants and fungi natural or genetically modified to catalyze chemical reactions that allow the decontamination of sites affected by radionuclides 1 These radioactive particles are by products generated as a result of activities related to nuclear energy and constitute a pollution and a radiotoxicity problem with serious health and ecological consequences due to its unstable nature of ionizing radiation emissions The techniques of bioremediation of environmental areas as soil water and sediments contaminated by radionuclides are diverse and currently being set up as an ecological and economic alternative to traditional procedures Physico chemical conventional strategies are based on the extraction of waste by excavating and drilling with a subsequent long range transport for their final confinement These works and transport have often unacceptable estimated costs of operation that could exceed a trillion dollars in the US and 50 million pounds in the UK 2 The species involved in these processes have the ability to influence the properties of radionuclides such as solubility bioavailability and mobility to accelerate its stabilization Its action is largely influenced by electron donors and acceptors nutrient medium complexation of radioactive particles with the material and environmental factors These are measures that can be performed on the source of contamination in situ or in controlled and limited facilities in order to follow the biological process more accurately and combine it with other systems ex situ 3 4 Contents 1 Areas contaminated by radioactivity 1 1 Typology of radionuclides and polluting waste 1 2 Ecological and human health consequences 2 Bacterial bioremediation 2 1 Bioreduction 2 1 1 Citrate complexes 2 2 Biosorption bioaccumulation and biomineralization 2 3 Biostimulation and bioaugmentation 2 4 Genetic engineering and omics 3 Plant bioremediation 3 1 Phytoextraction 3 2 Rhizofiltration 3 3 Phytovolatilization 3 4 Phytostabilization 4 Fungal bioremediation 5 Ways of research 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksAreas contaminated by radioactivity EditMain article Radioactive contamination Typology of radionuclides and polluting waste Edit Main article Radioactive waste The presence of radioactive waste in the environment may cause long term effects due to the activity and half life of the radionuclides leading their impact to grow with time 2 These particles exist in various oxidation states and are found as oxides coprecipitates or as organic or inorganic complexes according to their origin and ways of liberation Most commonly they are found in oxidized form which makes them more soluble in water and thus more mobile 4 Unlike organic contaminants however they cannot be destroyed and must be converted into a stable form or extracted from the environment 5 The sources of radioactivity are not exclusive of human activity The natural radioactivity does not come from human sources it covers up to of the total radioactivity in the world and has its origins in the interaction of terrestrial elements with high energy cosmic rays cosmogenic radionuclides or in the existing materials on Earth since its formation primordial radionuclides In this regard there are differences in the levels of radioactivity throughout the Earth s crust India and mountains like the Alps are among the areas with the highest level of natural radioactivity due to their composition of rocks and sand 6 The most frequent radionuclides in soils are naturally radium 226 226Ra radon 222 222Rn thorium 232 232Th uranium 238 238U and potassium 40 40K Potassium 40 up to 88 of total activity carbon 14 14C radium 226 uranium 238 and rubidium 87 87Rb are found in ocean waters Moreover in groundwater abound radius radioisotopes such as radium 226 and radium 228 228Ra 7 8 They are also habitual in building materials radionuclides of uranium thorium and potassium the latter common to wood 8 At the same time anthropogenic radionuclides caused by humans are due to thermonuclear reactions resulting from explosions and nuclear weapons tests discharges from nuclear facilities accidents deriving from the reprocessing of commercial fuel waste storage from these processes and to a lesser extent nuclear medicine 9 Some polluted sites by these radionuclides are the US DOE facilities like Hanford Site the Chernobyl and Fukushima exclusion zones and the affected area of Chelyabinsk Oblast due to the Kyshtym disaster In ocean waters the presence of tritium 3H cesium 137 137Cs strontium 90 90Sr plutonium 239 239Pu and plutonium 240 240Pu has significantly increased due to anthropogenic causes 10 11 In soils technetium 99 99Tc carbon 14 strontium 90 cobalt 60 60Co iodine 129 129I iodine 131 131I americium 241 241Am neptunium 237 237Np and various forms of radioactive plutonium and uranium are the most common radionuclides 2 8 9 Frequency of occurrence of selected radionuclides at US DOE facilitiesGround water Soils SedimentsSource United States Department of Energy US Government 1992 12 The classification of radioactive waste established by the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA distinguishes six levels according to equivalent dose specific activity heat released and half life of the radionuclides 13 Exempt waste EW Waste that meets the criteria for exclusion from regulatory control for radiation protection purposes Very short lived waste VSLW Waste with very short half lives often used for research and medical purposes that can be stored over a limited period of up to a few years and subsequently cleared from regulatory control Very low level waste VLLW Waste like soil and rubble with low levels of activity concentration that may also contain other hazardous waste Low level waste LLW Waste that is above clearance levels and requires robust isolation and containment for periods of up to a few hundred years and is suitable for disposal in engineered near surface facilities LLW include short lived radionuclides at higher levels of activity concentration and also long lived radionuclides but only at relatively low levels of activity concentration Intermediate level waste ILW Waste with long lived radionuclides that requires a greater degree of containment and isolation at greater depths High level waste HLW Waste with large amounts of long lived radionuclides that need to be stored in deep stable geological formations usually several hundred metres or more below the surface Ecological and human health consequences Edit Radioactive contamination is a potential danger for living organisms and results in external hazards concerning radiation sources outside the body and internal dangers as a result of the incorporation of radionuclides inside the body often by inhalation of particles or ingestion of contaminated food 14 In humans single doses from 0 25 Sv produce first anomalies in the amount of leukocytes This effect is accentuated if the absorbed dose is between 0 5 and 2 Sv in whose first damage nausea and hair loss are suffered The strip ranging between 2 and 5 Sv is considered the most serious and include bleeding ulcers and risk of death values exceeding 5 Sv involve immediate death 14 If radiation likewise is received in small doses over long periods of time the consequences can be equally severe It is difficult to quantify the health effects for doses below 10 mSv but it has been shown that there is a direct relationship between prolonged exposure and cancer risk although there is not a very clear dose response relationship to establish clear limits of exposure 15 The information available on the effect of natural background radiation with respect anthropogenic pollution on wildlife is scarce and refers to very few species It is very difficult to estimate from the available data the total doses that can accumulate during specific stages of the life cycle embryonic development or reproductive age in changes in behavior or depending on environmental factors such as seasonality 16 The phenomena of radioactive bioaccumulation bioconcentration and biomagnification however are especially known to sea level They are caused by the recruitment and retention of radioisotopes by bivalves crustaceans corals and phytoplankton which then amounted to the rest of the food chain at low concentration factors 17 Radiobiological literature and IAEA establish a safe limit of absorbed dose of 0 001 Gy d for terrestrial animals and 0 01 Gy d for plants and marine biota although this limit should be reconsidered for long lived species with low reproductive capacity 18 1909 study in which the effect of exposure to radioactive radium on lupins is shown The radiological activity was the same for all seedlings but not the duration of exposure descending from left to right the fourth as control Those exposed for longer suffered more damage and higher growth and germination deficiences 19 Radiation tests in model organisms that determine the effects of high radiation on animals and plants are 18 Chromosomal aberrations DNA damage Cancer particularly leukemia 2 Leukopenia Growth reduction Reproductive deficiencies sterility reduction in fecundity and occurrence of developmental abnormalities or reduction in viability of offspring Reduced seed germination Burned tissues exposed to radiation Mortality including both acute lethality and long term reduction in life span The effects of radioactivity on bacteria are given as in eukaryotes by ionization of water and production of reactive oxygen species These compounds mutate DNA strands and produce genetic damage inducing newly lysis and subsequent cell death 20 21 Its action on viruses on the other hand results in damaged nucleic acids and viral inactivation 22 They have a sensory threshold ranging between 1000 and 10 000 Gy range occupying most biological organisms which decreases with increasing genome size 23 Bacterial bioremediation EditThe biochemical transformation of radionuclides into stable isotopes by bacterial species significantly differs from the metabolism of organic compounds coming from carbon sources They are highly energetic radioactive forms which can be converted indirectly by the process of microbial energy transfer 1 Radioisotopes can be transformed directly through changes in valence state by acting as acceptors or by acting as cofactors to enzymes They can also be transformed indirectly by reducing and oxidizing agents produced by microorganisms that cause changes in pH or redox potential Other processes include precipitation and complexation of surfactants or chelating agents that bind to radioactive elements Human intervention on the other hand can improve these processes through genetic engineering and omics or by injection of microorganisms or nutrients into the treatment area 1 5 Bioreduction Edit Main article Biotransformation According to the radioactive element and the specific site conditions bacteria can enzymatically immobilize radionuclides directly or indirectly Their redox potential is exploited by some microbial species to carry out reductions that alter the solubility and hence mobility bioavailability and radiotoxicity This waste treatment technique called bioreduction or enzymatic biotransformation is very attractive because it can be done in mild conditions for the environment does not produce hazardous secondary waste and has potential as a solution for waste of various kinds 4 Depiction of direct enzymatic reduction Microorganisms use organic compounds as lactate acetate or formate as electron donors to reduce and leave radionuclides in insoluble form 2 Direct enzymatic reduction is the change of radionuclides of a higher oxidation state to a lower one made by facultative and obligate anaerobes The radioisotope interact with binding sites of metabolically active cells and is used as terminal electron acceptor in the electron transport chain where compounds such as ethyl lactate act as electron donors under anaerobic respiration 4 The periplasm plays a very important role in these bioreductions In the reduction of uranium VI to insoluble uranium IV made by Shewanella putrefaciens Desulfovibrio vulgaris Desulfovibrio desulfuricans and Geobacter sulfurreducens the activity of periplasmic cytochromes is required The reduction of technetium VII to technetium IV made by S putrefaciens G sulfurreducens D desulfuricans Geobacter metallireducens and Escherichia coli on the other hand requires the presence of the complex formate hydrogenlyase also placed in this cell compartment 2 Other radioactive actinides such as thorium plutonium neptunium and americium are enzymatically reduced by Rhodoferax ferrireducens S putrefaciens and several species of Geobacter and directly form an insoluble mineral phase 2 The phenomenon of indirect enzymatic reduction is carried out by sulfate reducing and dissimilatory metal reducing bacteria on excretion reactions of metabolites and breakdown products There is a coupling of the oxidation of organic acids produced by the excretion of these heterotrophic bacteria with the reduction of iron or other metals and radionuclides which forms insoluble compounds that can precipitate as oxide and hydroxide minerals In the case of sulfate reducing bacteria hydrogen sulfide is produced promoting increased solubility of polluting radionuclides and their bioleaching as liquid waste that can then be recovered 2 4 There are several species of reducing microorganisms that produce indirect sequestering agents and specific chelators such as siderophores These sequestering agents are crucial in the complexation of radionuclides and increasing their solubility and bioavailability Microbacterium flavescens for example grows in the presence of radioisotopes such as plutonium thorium uranium or americium and produces organic acids and siderophores that allow the dissolution and mobilization of radionuclides through the soil It seems that siderophores on bacterial surface could also facilitate the entry of these elements within the cell as well Pseudomonas aeruginosa also secretes chelating agents out that meet uranium and thorium when grown in a medium with these elements In general it has also been found that enterobactin siderophores are extremely effective in solubilizing actinide oxides of plutonium 2 4 Citrate complexes Edit Citrate is a chelator which binds to certain transition metals and radioactive actinides Stable complexes such as bidentate tridentate ligands with more than one atom bound and polynuclear complexes with several radioactive atoms can be formed with citrate and radionuclides which receive a microbial action Anaerobically Desulfovibrio desulfuricans and species of the genera Shewanella and Clostridium are able to reduce bidentate complexes of uranyl citrate VI to uranyl citrate IV and make them precipitate despite not being able to degrade metabolically complexed citrate at the end of the process 2 In denitrifying and aerobic conditions however it has been determined that it is not possible to reduce or degrade these uranium complexes Bioreduction do not get a head when they are citrate complex mixed metal complexes or when they are tridentate monomeric or polynuclear complexes since they become recalcitrant and persistent in the environment 4 24 From this knowledge exists a system that combines the degradation of radionuclide citrate complex with subsequent photodegradation of remaining reduced uranyl citrate previously not biodegradated but sensitive to light which allows for stable precipitates of uranium and also of thorium strontium or cobalt from contaminated lands 4 Biosorption bioaccumulation and biomineralization Edit Biosorption bioaccumulation and biomineralization strategies with a specific role for each cell compartment 3 Main articles Biosorption Bioaccumulation and Biomineralization The set of strategies that comprise biosorption bioaccumulation and biomineralization are closely related to each other because one way or another have a direct contact between the cell and radionuclide These mechanisms are evaluated accurately using advanced analysis technologies such as electron microscopy X ray diffraction and XANES EXAFS and X ray spectroscopies 1 25 Biosorption and bioaccumulation are two metabolic actions that are based on the ability to concentrate radionuclides over a thousand times the concentration of the environment They consist of complexation of radioactive waste with phosphates organic compounds and sulfites so that they become insoluble and less exposed to radiotoxicity They are particularly useful in biosolids for agricultural purposes and soil amendments although most properties of these biosolids are unknown 26 Biosorption method is based on passive sequestration of positively charged radioisotopes by lipopolysaccharides LPS on the cell membrane negatively charged either live or dead bacteria Its efficiency is directly related to the increase in temperature and can last for hours being a much faster method than direct bioreduction It occurs through the formation of slimes and capsules and with a preference for binding to the phosphate and phosphoryl groups although it also occurs with carboxyl amine or sulfhydryl groups Bacillota and other bacteria like Citrobacter freudii have significant biosorption capabilities Citrobacter does it through electrostatic interaction of uranium with phosphates of their LPS 2 3 Quantitative analyzes determine that in the case of uranium biosorption may vary within a range between 45 and 615 milligrams per gram of cell dry weight However it is a technique that requires a high amount of biomass to affect bioremediation it presents problems of saturation and other cations that compete for binding to the bacterial surface 3 Bioaccumulation refers to uptake of radionuclides into the cell where they are retained by complexations with negatively charged intracellular components precipitation or granules formations Unlike biosorption this is an active process it depends on an energy dependent transport system citation needed Some metals or radionuclides can be absorbed by bacteria accidentally because of its resemblance to dietary elements for metabolic pathways Several radioisotopes of strontium for example are recognized as analogs of calcium and incorporated within Micrococcus luteus 4 Uranium however has no known function and is believed that its entry into the cell interior may be due to its toxicity it is able to increase membrane permeability 3 Chernikovite and meta autunite radioactive minerals result of possible biomineralization Furthermore biomineralization also known as bioprecipitation is the precipitation of radionuclides through the generation of microbial ligands resulting in the formation of stable biogenic minerals These minerals have a very important role in the retention of radioactive contaminants A very localized and produced enzymatically ligand concentration is involved and provides a nucleation site for the onset of biomineral precipitation 27 This is particularly relevant in precipitations of phosphatase activity derivate biominerals which cleavage molecules such as glycerol phosphate on periplasm In Citrobacter and Serratia genera this cleavage liberates inorganic phosphates HPO42 that precipitates with uranyl ion UO22 and cause deposition of polycrystalline minerals around the cell wall 2 28 Serratia also form biofilms that promote precipitation of chernikovite rich in uranium and additionally remove up to 85 of cobalt 60 and 97 of cesium 137 by proton substitution of this mineral 25 In general biomineralization is a process in which the cells do not have limitations of saturation and can accumulate up to several times its own weight as precipitated radionuclides 4 Investigations of terrestrial and marine bacterial isolates belonging to the genera Aeromonas Bacillus Myxococcus Pantoea Pseudomonas Rahnella and Vibrio have also demonstrated the removal of uranium radioisotopes as phosphate biominerals in both oxic and anoxic growth conditions 25 Biostimulation and bioaugmentation Edit Main articles Biostimulation and Bioaugmentation Evolution of the Old Rifle UMTRA Site Colorado US from 1957 above until 2008 below in which biostimulation tasks were carried out 29 Aside from bioreduction biosorption bioaccumulation and biomineralization which are bacterial strategies for natural attenuation of radioactive contamination there are also human methods that increase the efficiency or speed of microbial processes This accelerated natural attenuation involves an intervention in the contaminated area to improve conversion rates of radioactive waste which tend to be slow There are two variants biostimulation and bioaugmentation 30 Biostimulation is the addition of nutrients with trace elements electron donors or electron acceptors to stimulate activity and growth of natural indigenous microbial communities 4 30 It can range from simple fertilization or infiltration called passive biostimulation to more aggressive injections to the ground and is widely used at US DOE sites 26 Nitrate is used as nutrient to biostimulate the reduction of uranium because it serves as very energetically favorable electron acceptor for metal reducing bacteria However many of these microorganisms Geobacter Shewanella or Desulfovibrio exhibit resistance genes to heavy metals that limit their ability to bioremediate radionuclides In these particular cases a carbon source such as ethanol is added to the medium to promote the reduction of nitrate at first and then of uranium Ethanol is also used in soil injection systems with hydraulic recirculations it raises the pH and promotes the growth of denitrifying and radionuclide reducing bacteria that produce biofilms and achieve almost 90 decrease in the concentration of radioactive uranium 2 A number of geophysical techniques have been used to monitor the effects of in situ biostimulation trials including measurement of spectral ionization potential self potentials current density complex resistivity and also reactive transport modelling RTM which measures hydrogeological and geochemical parameters to estimate chemical reactions of the microbial community 3 Bioaugmentaton on the other hand is the deliberated addition to the environment of microorganisms with desired traits to accelerate bacterial metabolic conversion of radioactive waste They are often added when necessary species for bioremediation do not exist in the treatment place 4 30 This technique has shown in field trials over the years that it does not offer better results than biostimulation neither it is clear that introduced species can be distributed effectively through the complex geological structures of most subsurface environments or that can compete long term with the indigenous microbiota 1 26 Genetic engineering and omics Edit Deinococcus radiodurans has much interest in genetic engineering for bioremediation of radioactive waste Main articles Genetic engineering and Omics Omics especially genomics and proteomics allow identifying and evaluating genes proteins and enzymes involved in radionuclide bioremediation apart from the structural and functional interactions that exist between them and other metabolites Genome sequencing of various microorganisms has uncovered for example that Geobacter sulfurreducens possess more than 100 coding regions for c type cytochromes involved in bioremediation radionuclide or that NiCoT gene is significantly overexpressed in Rhodopseudomonas palustris and Novosphingobium aromaticivorans when grown in medium with radioactive cobalt 1 2 From this information different genetic engineering and recombinant DNA techniques are being developed to generate specific bacteria for bioremediation Some constructs expressed in microbial species are phytochelatins polyhistidines and other polypeptides by fusion binding domains to outer membrane anchored proteins 2 Some of these genetically modified strains are derived from Deinococcus radiodurans one of the most radiation resistant organisms D radiodurans is capable to resist oxidative stress and DNA damage from radiation and reduces technetium uranium and chromium naturally as well Besides through insertion of genes from other species it has been achieved that it can also precipitates uranyl phosphates and degrades mercury by using toluene as an energy source to grow and stabilize other priority radionuclides 1 3 Directed evolution of bacterial proteins related to bioremediation of radionuclides is also a field research YieF enzyme for example naturally catalyzes the reduction of chromium with a very wide range of substrates Following protein engineering however it has also been able to participate in uranyl ion reduction 31 Plant bioremediation EditMain article Phytoremediation Phytoremediation processes Radionuclides can not be phytodegraded but converted to more stable or less toxic forms The use of plants to remove contaminants from the environment or to render them less harmful is called phytoremediation In the case of radionuclides it is a viable technology when decontamination times are long and waste are scattered at low concentrations 32 33 Some plant species are able to transform the state of radioisotopes without suffering toxicity concentrating them in different parts of their structure making them rush through the roots making them volatile or stabilizing them on the ground As in bacteria plant genetic engineering procedures and biostimulation called phytostimulation have improved and accelerate these processes particularly with regard to fast growing plants 33 The use of Agrobacterium rhizogenes for example is quite widespread and significantly increases radionuclide uptake by the roots citation needed Phytoextraction Edit Main article Phytoextraction In phytoextraction also phytoaccumulation phytosequesteration or phytoabsorption 34 plants carry radioactive waste from the root system to the vascular tissue and become concentrated in the biomass of shoots It is a technique that removes radionuclides without destroying the soil structure with minimal impact on soil fertility and valid for large areas with a low level of radioactivity Its efficiency is evaluated through bioaccumulation coefficient BC or total removal of radionuclides per m2 and is proven to attract cesium 137 strontium 90 technetium 99 cerium 144 plutonium 240 americium 241 neptunium 237 and various radioisotopes of thorium and radium 33 By contrast it requires large biomass production in short periods of time citation needed Species like common heather or amaranths are able to concentrate cesium 137 the most abundant radionuclide in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone In this region of Ukraine mustard greens could remove up to 22 of average levels of cesium activity in a single growing season In the same way bok choy and mustard greens can concentrate 100 times more uranium than other species 33 Rhizofiltration Edit Connected pond system at River Dearne England Main article Rhizofiltration Rhizofiltration is the adsorption and precipitation of radionuclides in plant roots or absorption thereof if soluble in effluents It has great efficiency in the treatment of cesium 137 and strontium 90 particularly by algae and aquatic plants such as Cladophora and Elodea genera respectively It is the most efficient strategy for bioremediation technologies in wetlands 34 but must have a continuous and rigorous control of pH to make it an optimal process 35 From this process some strategies have been designed based on sequences of ponds with a slow flow of water to clean polluted water with radionuclides The results of these facilities for flows of 1000 liters of effluent are about 95 retention of radiation in the first pond by plants and sludge and over 99 in three base systems 33 The most promising plants for rhizofiltration are sunflowers They are able to remove up to 95 of uranium of contaminated water in 24 hours and experiments in Chernobyl have demonstrated that they can concentrate on 55 kg of plant dry weight all the cesium and strontium radioactivity from an area of 75 m2 stabilized material suitable for transfer to a nuclear waste repository 33 Phytovolatilization Edit Main article Phytovolatilization Phytovolatilization involves the capture and subsequent transpiration of radionuclides into the atmosphere It does not remove contaminants but releases them in volatile form less harmful Despite not having too many applications for radioactive waste it is very useful for the treatment of tritium because it exploits plants ability to transpire enormous amounts of water 33 34 The treatment applied to tritium shielded by air produces almost no external radiation exposure but its incorporation in water presents a health hazard when absorbed into the body uses polluted effluents to irrigate phreatophytes It becomes a system with a low operation cost and low maintenance with savings of about 30 in comparison to conventional methods of pumping and covering with asphalt 33 Phytostabilization Edit Main article Phytostabilization Phytostabilization is an specially valid strategy for radioactive contamination based on the immobilization of radionuclides in the soil by the action of the roots This can occur by adsorption absorption and precipitation within root zone and ensures that radioactive waste can not be dispersed because soil erosion or leaching It is useful in controlling tailings from strip and open pit uranium mines and guarantees to retrieve the ecosystem 33 34 However it has significant drawbacks such as large doses of fertilizer needed to reforest the area apart from radioactive source which implies long term maintenance remaining at the same place citation needed Fungal bioremediation Edit Radiotrophic fungi growth has been described in reactor 4 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station Main article Mycoremediation Several fungi species have radioactive resistance values equal to or greater than more radioresistant bacteria they perform mycoremediation processes It was reported that some fungi had the ability of growing into feeding generating spores and decomposing pieces of graphite from destroyed reactor No 4 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station which is contaminated with high concentrations of cesium plutonium and cobalt radionuclides They were called radiotrophic fungi 36 Since then it has been shown that some species of Penicillium Cladosporium Paecilomyces and Xerocomus are able to use ionizing radiation as energy through the electronic properties of melanins 36 37 In their feeding they bioaccumulate radioisotopes creating problems on concrete walls of deep geological repositories 38 Other fungi like oyster mushrooms can bioremediate plutonium 239 and americium 241 39 Ways of research EditCurrent research on bioremediation techniques is fairly advanced and molecular mechanisms that govern them are well known However there are many doubts about the effectiveness and possible adversities of these processes in combination with the addition of agrochemicals In soils the role of mycorrhizae on radioactive waste is poorly described and sequestration patterns of radionuclides are not known with certainty 40 Longevity effects of some bacterial processes such as maintenance of uranium in insoluble form because of bioreductions or biomineralizations are unknown There are not clear details about the electronic transfer from some radionuclides with these bacterial species either 3 Another important aspect is the change of ex situ or laboratory scale processes to their real application in situ in which soil heterogeneity and environmental conditions generate reproduction deficiencies of optimal biochemical status of the used species a fact that decreases the efficiency This implies finding what are the best conditions in which to carry out an efficient bioremediation with anions metals organic compounds or other chelating radionuclides that can compete with the uptake of interest radioactive waste 2 Nevertheless in many cases research is focused on the extraction of soil and water and its ex situ biological treatment to avoid these problems 4 Finally the potential of GMOs is limited by regulatory agencies in terms of responsibility and bioethical issues Their release require support on the action zone and comparability with indigenous species Multidisciplinary research is focused on defining more precisely necessary genes and proteins to establish new cell free systems which may avoid possible side effects on the environment by the intrusion of transgenic or invasive species 2 See also Edit Biology portal Technology portal Nuclear technology portalList of environment topics Living machines Dutch standards Actinides in the environment Restoration ecology Uranium mining debate Radiobiology Nuclear powerReferences Edit a b c d e f g Faison B McCullough J Hazen TC Benson SM Palmisano A 2003 A NABIR Primer ed Bioremediation of metals and radionuclides What it is and how it works PDF 2nd edition Revision by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ed Washington United States Department of Energy a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Prakash D Gabani P Chandel A K Ronen Z Singh O V 2013 Bioremediation a genuine technology to remediate radionuclides from the environment Microbial Biotechnology New York 6 4 349 360 doi 10 1111 1751 7915 12059 PMC 3917470 PMID 23617701 a b c d e f g h Newsome L Morris K Lloyd J R 2014 The biogeochemistry and bioremediation of uranium and other priority radionuclides Chemical Geology 363 164 184 Bibcode 2014ChGeo 363 164N doi 10 1016 j chemgeo 2013 10 034 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Francis A J Nancharaiah Y V 2015 9 In situ and ex situ bioremediation of radionuclide contaminated soils at nuclear and NORM sites In van Velzen L ed Environmental Remediation and Restoration of Contaminated Nuclear and Norm Sites PDF Woodhead Publishing Series in Energy Elsevier pp 185 236 doi 10 1016 B978 1 78242 231 0 00009 0 ISBN 978 1 78242 231 0 a b Francis A J 2006 Microbial Transformations of Radionuclides and Environmental Restoration Through Bioremediation PDF Symposium on Emerging Trends in Separation Science and Technology Mumbai Brookhaven National Laboratory Consejo de Seguridad Nuclear Ministerio de Industria Turismo y Comercio de Espana ed Radiacion natural y artificial Web in Spanish Retrieved 24 February 2016 Varskog P Stralberg E Varskog A T S Raaum A 2003 Naturally occurring radionuclides in the marine environment an overview of current knowledge with emphasis on the North Sea area PDF Kjeller Norse Decom AS p 7 ISBN 978 82 92538 01 2 a b c Idaho State University ed Radioactivity in Nature Archived from the original Web on 5 February 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2016 a b Hu Q Weng J Wang J 2010 Sources of anthropogenic radionuclides in the environment a review Journal of Environmental Radioactivity Arlington 101 6 426 437 doi 10 1016 j jenvrad 2008 08 004 PMID 18819734 Campbell J A 1983 44 4 1 Tritium Web In Riley J P Chester R eds Chemical Oceanography Vol 8 New York Academic Press pp 111 117 ISBN 9781483219837 Aoyama M Hirose K 2008 Radiometric determination of anthropogenic radionuclides in seawater Radioactivity in the Environment Vol 11 pp 137 162 doi 10 1016 S1569 4860 07 11004 4 ISBN 9780080449883 ISSN 1569 4860 Riley R G Zachara J M Wobber F J 1992 Chemical Contaminants on DOE Lands and Selection of Contaminant Mixtures for Subsurface Science Research PDF Office of Energy Research 22 doi 10 2172 10147081 Vienna International Centre 2009 Classification of radioactive waste general safety guide PDF IAEA Safety Standards Series Viena International Atomic Energy Agency pp 5 6 ISBN 9789201092090 ISSN 1020 525X a b Sharma B K Sharma A Sharma M 2007 Effects of radioactive pollution Web In Sharma B K ed Environmental Chemistry Meerut Krishna Prakashan Media ISBN 9788182830127 Brenner D J Doll R Goodhead D T Hall E J Land C E 2003 Cancer risks attributable to low doses of ionizing radiation Assessing what we really know PNAS 100 24 13761 13766 Bibcode 2003PNAS 10013761B doi 10 1073 pnas 2235592100 ISSN 1091 6490 PMC 283495 PMID 14610281 Linsley G 1997 Radiation amp the environment Assessing effects on animals and plants PDF IAEA Bulletin Stewart G M Fowler S W Fisher N S 2011 8 The bioaccumulation of U and Th series radionuclides in marine organisms In Krishnaswami S Cochran J K eds U Th Series Nuclides in Aquatic Systems Radioactivity in the Environment Vol 13 Amsterdam Elsevier pp 269 305 doi 10 1016 S1569 4860 07 00008 3 ISBN 9780080564883 ISSN 1569 4860 a b Barnthouse L W 1995 Environmental Sciences Division ed Effects of ionizing radiation on terrestrial plants and animals a workshop report PDF 4496 Tennessee United States Department of Energy Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 21 Retrieved 2016 05 21 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Gager C S 1909 The Influence of Radium Rays on a Few Life Processes of Plants Djvu The Popular Science Monthly New York 74 222 232 Confalonieri F Sommer S 2011 Bacterial and archaeal resistance to ionizing radiation Journal of Physics Conference Series Orsay 261 1 012005 Bibcode 2011JPhCS 261a2005C doi 10 1088 1742 6596 261 1 012005 Kelner A Dexter Bellamy W Stapleton G E Zelle M R 1955 Symposium on radiation effects on cells and bacteria Bacteriological Reviews 19 1 22 24 doi 10 1128 MMBR 19 1 22 44 1955 PMC 180808 PMID 14363075 Specter S Jeffries D 1996 18 Disinfection Web In W J Mahy B O Krango H eds Virology Methods Manual San Diego Academic Press pp 353 356 ISBN 9780080543581 Lowy R J 2005 Ionizing Radiation Inactivation of Medically Relevant Viruses Web In Gazso L G Ponta C C eds Radiation Inactivation of Bioterrorism Agents NATO Science Series Series I Life and behavioural sciences Vol 365 Budapest IOS Press pp 175 186 ISBN 9781586034887 ISSN 1566 7693 Francis A J 2012 6 Impacts of microorganisms on radionuclides in contaminated environments and waste materials In Poinssot C Geckeis H eds Radionuclide Behaviour in the Natural Environment Science Implications and Lessons for the Nuclear industry Woodhead Publishing Series in Energy Woodhead Publishing pp 161 226 ISBN 9780857097194 a b c Martinez R J Beazley M J Sobecky P A 2014 Phosphate Mediated Remediation of Metals and Radionuclides Advances in Ecology 2014 1 14 doi 10 1155 2014 786929 a b c Hazen T C Tabak H H 2005 Developments in bioremediation of soils and sediments polluted with metals and radionuclides 2 Field research on bioremediation of metals and radionuclides Reviews in Environmental Science and Bio Technology 4 3 157 183 doi 10 1007 s11157 005 2170 y ISSN 1572 9826 S2CID 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Information doi 10 2172 883649 S2CID 138099083 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Willey N Collins C 2007 Phytoremediation of soils contaminated with radionuclides In Shaw G ed Radioactivity in the Terrestrial Environment Vol 10 Elsevier pp 43 69 doi 10 1016 S1569 4860 06 10003 0 ISBN 9780080474892 a b c d e f g h i Dushenkov S 2003 Trends in phytoremediation of radionuclides Plant and Soil Netherlands 249 1 167 175 doi 10 1023 A 1022527207359 ISSN 1573 5036 S2CID 43065577 a b c d Kumar D Walther C eds 2014 4 Phytoremediation techniques Radionuclide Contamination and Remediation Through Plants Hannover Springer pp 9 14 ISBN 9783319076652 Rhizofiltration www hawaii edu Retrieved 2022 06 18 a b Dadachova E Casadevall A 2008 Ionizing Radiation how fungi cope adapt and exploit with the help of melanin Current Opinion in Microbiology 11 6 525 531 doi 10 1016 j mib 2008 09 013 PMC 2677413 PMID 18848901 Kalac P 2001 A review of edible mushroom radioactivity Food Chemistry 75 1 29 35 doi 10 1016 S0308 8146 01 00171 6 Fomina M Burford E P M Gadd G 2006 Fungal dissolution and transformation of minerals significance for nutrient and metal mobility Web In Gadd G M ed Fungi in Biogeochemical Cycles Cambridge University Press pp 236 266 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511550522 011 ISBN 9780521845793 Galanda D Matel L Strisovska J Dulanska S 2014 Mycoremediation the study of transfer factor for plutonium and americium uptake from the ground Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry Budapest 299 3 1411 1416 doi 10 1007 s10967 013 2909 9 ISSN 1588 2780 S2CID 96123551 Zhu Y G Shaw G 2000 Soil contamination with radionuclides and potential remediation Chemosphere 41 1 2 121 128 Bibcode 2000Chmsp 41 121Z doi 10 1016 S0045 6535 99 00398 7 PMID 10819188 External links EditDengra Grau F Xavier Bioremediation of radioactive waste PDF Scientific poster of the Bachelor Thesis related to this article Autonomous University of Barcelona Digital Repository of Documents Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bioremediation of radioactive waste amp oldid 1102235816, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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