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Dive into the research topics where Josef Trögl is active.

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Featured researches published by Josef Trögl.


Sensors | 2015

Fiber-Optic Chemical Sensors and Fiber-Optic Bio-Sensors

Marie Pospisilova; Gabriela Kuncová; Josef Trögl

This review summarizes principles and current stage of development of fiber-optic chemical sensors (FOCS) and biosensors (FOBS). Fiber optic sensor (FOS) systems use the ability of optical fibers (OF) to guide the light in the spectral range from ultraviolet (UV) (180 nm) up to middle infrared (IR) (10 µm) and modulation of guided light by the parameters of the surrounding environment of the OF core. The introduction of OF in the sensor systems has brought advantages such as measurement in flammable and explosive environments, immunity to electrical noises, miniaturization, geometrical flexibility, measurement of small sample volumes, remote sensing in inaccessible sites or harsh environments and multi-sensing. The review comprises briefly the theory of OF elaborated for sensors, techniques of fabrications and analytical results reached with fiber-optic chemical and biological sensors.


Folia Microbiologica | 2007

Response of the bioluminescent bioreporter Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44 to analogs of naphthalene and salicylic acid.

Josef Trögl; Gabriela Kuncová; L. Kubicová; Patrik Pařík; J. Hálová; K. Demnerová; Steven Ripp; Gary S. Sayler

Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44 is alux-based bioluminescent bioreporter capable of selective luminescence in the presence of naphthalene and/or salicylic acid intermediate of its metabolism. We attempted to induce bioluminescence (BL) in this strain with 72 compounds,viz. substituted naphthalenes, naphthalene-like compounds (e.g., quinoline), substituted salicylic acids, salicylic acid-like compounds (e.g., 2-anthranilic acid), oligocyclic aromates, and intermediates of naphthalene metabolism to better discriminate response specificity. From them, 42 induced BL significantly lower as compared to naphthalene, three (viz. isoquinoline,o-cresol, and salicylamide) induced BL significantly greater than naphthalene, and 27 yielded no bioluminescent response whatsoever. Strain HK44 is therefore not prone to extensive false-positive signaling and can serve as a fairly specific indicator organism for naphthalene bioavailability. At elevated concentrations, 41 compounds inhibited BL. Thus, the inclusion of constitutive bioreporter controls as indicators of sample toxicity is vital to successful biosensing application.


Sensors | 2012

Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44: Lessons Learned from a Model Whole-Cell Bioreporter with a Broad Application History

Josef Trögl; Archana Chauhan; Steven Ripp; Alice C. Layton; Gabriela Kuncová; Gary S. Sayler

Initially described in 1990, Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44 served as the first whole-cell bioreporter genetically endowed with a bioluminescent (luxCDABE) phenotype directly linked to a catabolic (naphthalene degradative) pathway. HK44 was the first genetically engineered microorganism to be released in the field to monitor bioremediation potential. Subsequent to that release, strain HK44 had been introduced into other solids (soils, sands), liquid (water, wastewater), and volatile environments. In these matrices, it has functioned as one of the best characterized chemically-responsive environmental bioreporters and as a model organism for understanding bacterial colonization and transport, cell immobilization strategies, and the kinetics of cellular bioluminescent emission. This review summarizes the characteristics of P. fluorescens HK44 and the extensive range of its applications with special focus on the monitoring of bioremediation processes and biosensing of environmental pollution.


The Scientific World Journal | 2014

Biodegradation of spilled diesel fuel in agricultural soil: effect of humates, zeolite, and bioaugmentation.

Pavel Kuráň; Josef Trögl; Jana Nováková; Věra Pilařová; Petra Dáňová; Jana Pavlorková; Josef Kozler; František Novák; Jan Popelka

Possible enhancement of biodegradation of petroleum hydrocarbons in agricultural soil after tank truck accident (~5000 mg/kg dry soil initial concentration) by bioaugmentation of diesel degrading Pseudomonas fluorescens strain and addition of abiotic additives (humates, zeolite) was studied in a 9-month pot experiment. The biodegradation process was followed by means of analytical parameters (hydrocarbon index expressed as content of C10–C40 aliphatic hydrocarbons, ratio pristane/C17, and total organic carbon content) and characterization of soil microbial community (content of phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) as an indicator of living microbial biomass, respiration, and dehydrogenase activity). The concentration of petroleum hydrocarbons (C10–C40) was successfully reduced by ~60% in all 15 experiment variants. The bioaugmentation resulted in faster hydrocarbon elimination. On the contrary, the addition of humates and zeolite caused only a negligible increase in the degradation rate. These factors, however, affected significantly the amount of PLFA. The humates caused significantly faster increase of the total PLFA suggesting improvement of the soil microenvironment. Zeolite caused significantly slower increase of the total PLFA; nevertheless it aided in homogenization of the soil. Comparison of microbial activities and total PLFA revealed that only a small fraction of autochthonous microbes took part in the biodegradation which confirms that bioaugmentation was the most important treatment.


Sensors | 2015

Phospholipid Fatty Acids as Physiological Indicators of Paracoccus denitrificans Encapsulated in Silica Sol-Gel Hydrogels

Josef Trögl; Ivana Jirková; Pavel Kuráň; Elmira Akhmetshina; Tat′jána Brovdyová; Alexander Sirotkin; Tatiana Kirilina

The phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) content was determined in samples of Paracoccus denitrificans encapsulated in silica hydrogel films prepared from prepolymerized tetramethoxysilane (TMOS). Immediately after encapsulation the total PLFA concentration was linearly proportional to the optical density (600 nm) of the input microbial suspension (R2 = 0.99). After 7 days this relationship remained linear, but with significantly decreased slope, indicating a higher extinction of bacteria in suspensions of input concentration 108 cells/mL and higher. trans-Fatty acids, indicators of cytoplasmatic membrane disturbances, were below the detection limit. The cy/pre ratio (i.e., ratio of cyclopropylated fatty acids (cy17:0 + cy19:0) to their metabolic precursors (16:1ω7 + 18:1ω7)), an indicator of the transition of the culture to a stationary growth-phase, decreased depending on co-immobilization of nutrients in the order phosphate buffer > mineral medium > Luria Broth rich medium. The ratio, too, was logarithmically proportional to cell concentration. These results confirm the applicability of total PLFA as an indicator for the determination of living biomass and cy/pre ratio for determination of nutrient limitation of microorganisms encapsulated in sol-gel matrices. This may be of interest for monitoring of sol-gel encapsulated bacteria proposed as optical recognition elements in biosensor construction, as well as other biotechnological applications.


Folia Microbiologica | 2010

Bioluminescence of Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44 in the Course of Encapsulation into Silica Gel. Effect of Methanol

Josef Trögl; Gabriela Kuncová; Pavel Kuráň

The bioluminescence (BLM) and colony-forming units (CFU) of Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44 were monitored during encapsulation into pre-polymerized Si(OMe)4. The non-induced BLM of free cells was increased in the presence of 0.5–2.5 % MeOH. After mixing silica sol with the cell suspension, both BLM and CFU dropped to 1–3 and 8–18 %, respectively; both remained lowered as long as the silica biofilm contained residual MeOH. The kinetics of MeOH being released from silica biofilms (a thickness of 2–6 mm) were first-order. The decrease of bacterial activity due to encapsulation was proportional to the biofilm thickness. MeOH evolving during encapsulation is probably the principal stress factor but not the only one.


Folia Microbiologica | 2013

Estimation of the quantity of bacteria encapsulated in Lentikats Biocatalyst via phospholipid fatty acids content: a preliminary study

Josef Trögl; Ivana Jirková; Petra Zemánková; Věra Pilařová; Petra Dáňová; Jana Pavlorková; Pavel Kuráň; Jan Popelka; Lucie Křiklavová

The content of phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) was determined in samples of polyvinyl alcohol lenses (Lentikats Biocatalyst, LB) with encapsulated Paracoccus denitrificans withdrawn during long-term denitrification experiments. The total PLFA content correlated highly with specific denitrification activities of LB as well as biomass estimation based on image analyses of microscopic photos. The results confirmed the applicability of PLFA determination for estimation of the amount of living encapsulated microbial biomass during biotechnological applications.


African Journal of Biotechnology | 2011

Application of Lentikats Biotechnology for removal of nitrates from ion-exchange brines: Implications for adaptation of encapsulated denitrifiers

Josef Trögl; V. Pila; Alžběta Boušková; Jan Mrákota; Radek Stloukal

-1 Cl - , 1.35 g.L -1 SO 4 2- , and 2.26 g.L -1 N-NO 3 - ). The effect of brines dilution on the denitrification activity of fresh Lentikats Biocatalysts was tested simultaneously for four dilutions (100% = non-diluted, 80% = 4:1 brine:water, 60 and 40%) in four sequent repetitions per dilution without intermediate cultivation. In the first set, the denitrification of 100 and 80% brine was severely inhibited, while the denitrification activity in 60 and 40% brines was comparable to activity in non-inhibiting denitrification medium. The denitrification activity in 60 and 40% brines declined in later repetitions due to a lack of nutrients, while it increased in 80 and 100% brines before it declined as well. Such results are in contradiction to previous observations based on correlation analyses of data from longer experimental period. The detailed comparison implicates the adaptation of the encapsulated denitrification bacteria to higher salinity and emphasizes its importance for achievement of high denitrification activities of Lentikats Biocatalyst in industrial-scale applications even in non-diluted brines.


Chemical Papers | 2014

Preparation of iron, aluminium, calcium, magnesium, and zinc humates for environmental applications

Sylvie Kříženecká; Stanislav Hejda; Vladimír Machovič; Josef Trögl

A few non-conventional humate sorbents, i.e. iron humate (FeH), aluminium humate (AlH), calcium humate (CaH), magnesium humate (MgH), and zinc humate (ZnH), were prepared from a commercial product Fortehum L/K (Humatex, Bílina, Czech Republic). The metal content in humates was determined by X-ray fluorescence analysis, the organic elements (C, H, N, and S) were analysed by an Elementar Vario III and the functional groups were determined by classical methods using KBr pellets and diffuse reflection infrared spectroscopy (DRIFTS). FeH, AlH, and ZnH were tested as sorbents for the removal of inorganic or organic pollutants (metals, inorganic ions, dyes, and chlorophenols) from waste water. Sorption properties decreased in order: ZnH, AlH, FeH. CaH and MgH are partly soluble and therefore they are not usable as sorbents. However, their ion-exchange abilities for heavy metals are excellent which makes them usable for phytoremediation and bioremediation.


Folia Microbiologica | 2010

Automatic formation of hypotheses on the relationships between structure of naphthalene analogs and bioluminescence response of bioreporter Pseudomonas fluorescens HK44

Josef Trögl; J. Hálová; Gabriela Kuncová; Patrik Pařík

Seven hypotheses on relationships between the structure of naphthalene analogs and bioluminescence response of bioreporter Pseudomonas fluorescens were formulated using GUHA (General Unary Hypotheses Automaton) on a training set of 37 compounds. Prediction of bioluminescence response of 12 new naphthalene analogs was successful in 69 % cases and resulted in rejection of single hypothesis. The results demonstrate applicability of GUHA in structure-activity research, especially for qualitative data.

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Gabriela Kuncová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Steven Ripp

University of Tennessee

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J. Hálová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Lucie Křiklavová

Technical University of Liberec

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Eva Kakosová

Technical University of Liberec

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L. Kubicová

Charles University in Prague

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Marie Czinnerová

Technical University of Liberec

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Pavel Hrabák

Technical University of Liberec

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