Difference between revisions of "Team:Virginia"

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<h2017 style="font-size:30px; font-family:Montserrat-Light; color:#B4DDBF;"> VIRGINIA IGEM 2017 PRESENTS </h2017><br><br><br>
 
<h2017 style="font-size:30px; font-family:Montserrat-Light; color:#B4DDBF;"> VIRGINIA IGEM 2017 PRESENTS </h2017><br><br><br>
 
<h2017 style="font-size:90px; font-family:Montserrat;color:#9BC2C9;"><b> Sewage PD</b> </h2017><br><br>
 
<h2017 style="font-size:90px; font-family:Montserrat;color:#9BC2C9;"><b> Sewage PD</b> </h2017><br><br>

Revision as of 04:33, 31 October 2017






VIRGINIA IGEM 2017 PRESENTS


Sewage PD

a single chassis ammonia removal
device for use in wastewater
treatment systems




Our project aims to create a complete ammonia removal device by combining nitrification and denitrification capabilities within one single bacterium, Paracoccus denitrificans.


Nitrification is the conversion of ammonia (NH3) into nitrite (NO2-) through hydroxylamine (NH2OH). Our bacterium is a facultative anaerobe that natively performs denitrification, which is a multi-step conversion of nitrates (NO3-) and nitrites (NO2-) into inert nitrogen gas (N2). Not only ammonia and nitrite/nitrate are dangerous to humans, but they also happen to be the nutrients that fuel the process of water eutrophication. Our plan is to transform the genes responsible for nitrification from a nitrifying bacterium, Nitrosomonas europaea, into P. denitrificans. Once this is accomplished, we will perform full-scale characterization of our device and assess its ability to replace the bacterial co-culture living in Wastewater Activated Sludge (WAS) -- the current nutrient removal method at wastewater treatment plants.