Richard J. Weld
Lincoln University (Pennsylvania)
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Publication
Featured researches published by Richard J. Weld.
Bioresource Technology | 2013
Audrey S. Commault; Gavin Lear; Michael A. Packer; Richard J. Weld
Through their ability to directly transfer electrons to electrodes, Geobacter sp. are key organisms for microbial fuel cell technology. This study presents a simple method to reproducibly select Geobacter-dominated anode biofilms from a mixed inoculum of bacteria using graphite electrodes initially poised at -0.25, -0.36 and -0.42 V vs. Ag/AgCl. The biofilms all produced maximum power density of approximately 270 m Wm(-2) (projected anode surface area). Analysis of 16S rRNA genes and intergenic spacer (ITS) sequences found that the biofilm communities were all dominated by bacteria closely related to Geobacter psychrophilus. Anodes initially poised at -0.25 V reproducibly selected biofilms that were dominated by a strain of G. psychrophilus that was genetically distinct from the strain that dominated the -0.36 and -0.42 V biofilms. This work demonstrates for the first time that closely related strains of Geobacter can have very different competitive advantages at different anode potentials.
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2011
Neil Pasco; Richard J. Weld; Joanne M. Hay; Ravi Gooneratne
Whole cell biosensors are the focus of considerable and increasing interest worldwide as methods for detecting and quantifying environmental toxicity, including biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), heavy metals, antibiotics, pesticides and herbicides. This review follows the development of whole cell biosensors from attempts to utilise changes in cellular metabolism to determine BOD and general toxicity, through the exploitation of unique metabolic pathways to detect specific toxicants, to the increasingly widespread use of genetic engineering to build new, and modify existing, sensing pathways.
Microbiology | 2010
Johanna M. Steyaert; Richard J. Weld; Artemio Mendoza-Mendoza; Alison Stewart
Trichoderma spp. have served as models for asexual reproduction in filamentous fungi for over 50 years. Physical stimuli, such as light exposure and mechanical injury to the mycelium, trigger conidiation; however, conidiogenesis itself is a holistic response determined by the cells metabolic state, as influenced by the environment and endogenous biological rhythms. Key environmental parameters are the carbon and nitrogen status and the C : N ratio, the ambient pH and the level of calcium ions. Recent advances in our understanding of the molecular biology of this fungus have revealed a conserved mechanism of environmental perception through the White Collar orthologues BLR-1 and BLR-2. Also implicated in the molecular regulation are the PacC pathways and the conidial regulator VELVET. Signal transduction cascades which link environmental signals to physiological outputs have also been revealed.
Bioresource Technology | 2011
Richard J. Weld; Rupinder Singh
A thermophilic anaerobic digester (AD) was combined with a microbial fuel cell (MFC) to evaluate whether either component had increased stability when operated in combination as a hybrid system, perturbed by the addition of acetic acid. The MFC and the anaerobic digester were able to operate effectively together. The MFC was more susceptible to high acetic acid load than the AD. The hybrid system did not have increased resilience compared to the solitary systems in the conditions tested. However, the low pH had a relatively delayed effect on the MFC compared to the AD, allowing the hybrid system to have a more stable energy output. Also, at very low pH, when operating as a hybrid, the AD component was able to recover pH to normal levels when the MFC component failed. These results demonstrate that there are synergies that can be gained from this hybrid system.
Fungal Biology | 2010
Johanna M. Steyaert; Richard J. Weld; Alison Stewart
Conidiation in Trichoderma has been demonstrated to be favoured by a low ambient pH and more recently PacC (Pac1) mediated pH-regulation has been implicated in the control of conidiation. In this study, ambient pH effects on conidiation were investigated in three isolates (Trichoderma hamatum, Trichoderma atroviride and Trichoderma pleuroticola) exposed to a single blue-light burst or to mycelial injury. Disks of conidiation were observed for T. atroviride in response to a single light exposure, which clearly demonstrates that all cells are potentially competent for photoconidiation. Previous studies have suggested T. hamatum does not conidiate in response to mycelial injury, however, in this study a clear injury response was observed from pH 2.8 to 3.2. T. pleuroticola displayed three distinct pH-dependent colony morphologies from pH 2.8 to 5.2. Conidiation was strictly low pH-dependent on buffered media and observed at all pH values on unbuffered media. The dependence of the conidial phenotype on the buffering state of the medium rather than the pH per se, was unexpected as it has been suggested that conidiation is PacC regulated. Conversely, excretion of an anthraquinone was strictly pH-dependent regardless of the buffering state. These studies highlight the complexity of ambient pH effects on Trichoderma spp. and demonstrate a need to widen the scope of research to multiple species.
Bioelectrochemistry | 2015
Audrey S. Commault; Gavin Lear; Richard J. Weld
Geobacter-dominated biofilms can be selected under stringent conditions that limit the growth of competing bacteria. However, in many practical applications, such stringent conditions cannot be maintained and the efficacy and stability of these artificial biofilms may be challenged. In this work, biofilms were selected on low-potential anodes (-0.36 V vs Ag/AgCl, i.e. -0.08 V vs SHE) in minimal acetate or ethanol media. Selection conditions were then relaxed by transferring the biofilms to synthetic wastewater supplemented with soil as a source of competing bacteria. We tracked community succession and functional changes in these biofilms. The Geobacter-dominated biofilms showed stability in their community composition and electrochemical properties, with Geobacter sp. being still electrically active after six weeks in synthetic wastewater with power densities of 100±19 mW·m(-2) (against 74±14 mW·m(-2) at week 0) for all treatments. After six weeks, the ethanol-selected biofilms, despite their high taxon richness and their efficiency at removing the chemical oxygen demand (0.8 g·L(-1) removed against the initial 1.3 g·L(-1) injected), were the least stable in terms of community structure. These findings have important implications for environmental microbial fuel cells based on Geobacter-dominated biofilms and suggest that they could be stable in challenging environments.
New Zealand Journal of Botany | 2014
Audrey S. Commault; Gavin Lear; Philip M. Novis; Richard J. Weld
Conventional microbial fuel cells (MFCs) consist of biological anodes and abiotic cathodes separated by a proton-exchange membrane. The abiotic cathode usually catalyses the reduction of oxygen to produce water by means of expensive catalysts such as platinum.1 The cathodic reaction is often limiting in MFCs and researchers are now focusing on efficient, low-cost catalysts to improve oxygen reduction at the cathode. This paper describes a photosynthetic biocathode in a sediment-type MFC constructed without a proton-exchange membrane. The carbon and stainless steel cathode did not contain any catalyst, but was covered in a biofilm composed of a complex community including microalgae and cyanobacteria. Although electroactive species were detected in the cathode biofilm, no biocatalysis of oxygen reduction was observed. Enhancement of the current output was mostly due to the production of pure oxygen near the cathode surface by the photosynthetic biofilm. Photosynthesis could produce dissolved oxygen levels approximately four times higher than oxygen levels obtained by aeration. The MFC was able to generate a maximum power density of 11 mW/m2 (projected anode area) over six months without feeding.
Fungal Biology | 2010
Johanna M. Steyaert; Richard J. Weld; Leandro Lopes Loguercio; Alison Stewart
Trichoderma species conidiate in response to blue light, however, unlike in the blue-light model fungus Neurospora crassa, conidiation in Trichoderma spp. has been considered to be non-circadian. In this study we uncovered evidence for circadian conidiation in Trichoderma pleuroticola and identified orthologues of the key N. crassa clock components, wc-1 (blr-1) and frq.
Bioresource Technology | 2015
Audrey S. Commault; Frédéric Barrière; Laure Lapinsonnière; Gavin Lear; Solène Bouvier; Richard J. Weld
This study evaluated the impact of inoculum source and anode surface modification (carboxylate -COO(-) and sulfonamide -SO2NH2 groups) on the microbial composition of anode-respiring biofilms. These two factors have not previously been considered in detail. Three different inoculum sources were investigated, a dry aerobic soil, brackish estuarine mud and freshwater sediment. The biofilms were selected using a poised anode (-0.36 V vs Ag/AgCl) and acetate as the electron donor in a three-electrode configuration microbial fuel cell (MFC). Population profiling and cloning showed that all biofilms selected were dominated by Geobacter sp., although their electrochemical properties varied depending on the source inoculum and electrode surface modification. These findings suggest that Geobacter sp. are widespread in soils, even those that do not provide a continuously anaerobic environment, and are better at growing in the MFC conditions than other bacteria.
Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2012
Wenfeng Song; Neil Pasco; Ravi Gooneratne; Richard J. Weld
Three separate genetic strategies, based upon the induced expression of three different genes (lacZ, selA and nuoA) were tested to provide the SciTox assay with sensitive and specific detection of the antibiotic tetracycline (Tet). All three strategies relied on gene induction from the Tn10 tetA promoter. Both lacZ and nuoA biosensors responded specifically and sensitively to sub-inhibitory concentrations of Tet. However, the selA-based assay was not sensitive enough to detect Tet in the SciTox assay. The detection limits for Tet of the lacZ and nuoA biosensor strains were 0.11 μg ml(-1) and 0.0026 μg ml(-1), respectively, and their linear ranges were 0.1-1 μg ml(-1) and 0-0.01 μg ml(-1), respectively. While lacZ has previously been used as a reporter gene in an amperometric bioassay, nuoA is a novel and more sensitive reporter gene. This is the first report in which a respiratory gene was used as a reporter gene in an amperometric biosensor. The results indicate that this approach can produce a highly sensitive detection system. In order to test whether the new system could be used to detect other chemicals, the nuoA gene was re-engineered to be driven by the copper-inducible copA promoter. Using this strain, the SciTox assay was found to be able to specifically detect copper and silver ions.
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École nationale supérieure de chimie et de physique de Bordeaux
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