The seafloor is a unique environment, which allows insights into how geochemical processes affect the diversity of biological life. Among its diverse ecosystems are deep-sea brine pools - water bodies characterized by a unique combination of extreme conditions. The ‘polyextremophiles’ that constitute the microbial assemblage of these deep hot brines have not been comprehensively studied. We report a comparative taxonomic analysis of the prokaryotic communities of the sediments directly below the Red Sea brine pools, namely, Atlantis II, Discovery, Chain Deep, and an adjacent brine-influenced site. Analyses of sediment samples and high-throughput pyrosequencing of PCR-amplified environmental 16S ribosomal RNA genes (16S rDNA) revealed that one sulfur (S)-rich Atlantis II and one nitrogen (N)-rich Discovery Deep section contained distinct microbial populations that differed from those found in the other sediment samples examined. Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Cyanobacteria, Deferribacteres, and Euryarchaeota were the most abundant bacterial and archaeal phyla in both the S- and N-rich sections. Relative abundance-based hierarchical clustering of the 16S rDNA pyrotags assigned to major taxonomic groups allowed us to categorize the archaeal and bacterial communities into three major and distinct groups; group I was unique to the S-rich Atlantis II section (ATII-1), group II was characteristic for the N-rich Discovery sample (DD-1), and group III reflected the composition of the remaining sediments. Many of the groups detected in the S-rich Atlantis II section are likely to play a dominant role in the cycling of methane and sulfur due to their phylogenetic affiliations with bacteria and archaea involved in anaerobic methane oxidation and sulfate reduction.
Silver nanoparticle-reinforced thermoplastic polyurethane (PU/AgNP) nanocomposite foams were prepared using in situ polymerization techniques in accordance with DOW chemicals' industrial standards. The foams exhibited improved mechanical performance, induced antimicrobial properties, and intact stability when subjected to a thermal degradation treatment. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) indicated a homogeneous dispersion of the silver nanoparticle (AgNP) within the polymeric matrix at low filler loadings and a cluster formation at higher loadings. SEM also indicated the agglomeration of the silver nanofiller particles as a result of the thermal degradation treatment, which caused them to lose their nanoscopic characteristics and act as ordinary silver metal. Molecular modeling techniques were used to explain these observations and confirmed the higher repulsive interactions between the polymer chains and the silver nanoparticles with the increase in the nanofiller content. Stress relaxation of the nanocomposites showed optimum mechanical performance and lowest hysteresis for the 0.1% AgNP nanocomposites due to the confinement of the PU chains between the large number of the nanoparticles. Incubation with 0.1% foam inhibited the growth of Klebseilla spp. and Escherichia coli and to some extent Staphylococcus spp. This is very interesting as the same nanocomposite loaded with 0.1% AgNp has also shown the best mechanical performance highlighting the strong action of this "unclustered" low concentration on both the material and biomedical sides.
The Red Sea possesses a unique geography, and its shores are rich in mangrove, macro-algal and coral reef ecosystems. Various sources of pollution affect Red Sea biota, including microbial life. We assessed the effects of industrialization on microbes along the Egyptian Red Sea coast at eight coastal sites and two lakes. The bacterial communities of sediment samples were analyzed using bacterial 16S rDNA pyrosequencing of V6-V4 hypervariable regions. The taxonomic assignment of 131,402 significant reads to major bacterial taxa revealed five main bacterial phyla dominating the sampled sites: Proteobacteria (68%), Firmicutes (13%), Fusobacteria (12%), Bacteriodetes (6%), and Spirochetes (0.03%). Further analysis revealed distinct bacterial consortia that primarily included (1) marine Vibrio spp.—suggesting a “marine Vibrio phenomenon”; (2) potential human pathogens; and (3) oil-degrading bacteria. We discuss two divergent microbial consortia that were sampled from Solar Lake West near Taba/Eilat and Saline Lake in Ras Muhammad; these consortia contained the highest abundance of human pathogens and no pathogens, respectively. Our results draw attention to the effects of industrialization on the Red Sea and suggest the need for further analysis to overcome the hazardous effects observed at the impacted sites.
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