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Dive into the research topics where Steven Ripp is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven Ripp.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2000

Field applications of genetically engineered microorganisms for bioremediation processes.

Gary S. Sayler; Steven Ripp

Genetically engineered microorganisms (GEMs) have shown potential for bioremediation applications in soil, groundwater, and activated sludge environments, exhibiting enhanced degradative capabilities encompassing a wide range of chemical contaminants. However, the vast majority of studies pertaining to genetically engineered microbial bioremediation are supported by laboratory-based experimental data. In general, relatively few examples of GEM applications in environmental ecosystems exist. Unfortunately, the only manner in which to fully address the competence of GEMs in bioremediation efforts is through long-term field release studies. It is therefore essential that field studies be performed to acquire the requisite information for determining the overall effectiveness and risks associated with GEM introduction into natural ecosystems.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Use of Saccharomyces cerevisiae BLYES expressing bacterial bioluminescence for rapid, sensitive detection of estrogenic compounds

John Sanseverino; Rakesh K. Gupta; Alice C. Layton; Stacey S. Patterson; Steven Ripp; Leslie Saidak; Michael L. Simpson; T. Wayne Schultz; Gary S. Sayler

ABSTRACT An estrogen-inducible bacterial lux-based bioluminescent reporter was developed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for applications in chemical sensing and environmental assessment of estrogen disruptor activity. The strain, designated S. cerevisiae BLYES, was constructed by inserting tandem estrogen response elements between divergent yeast promoters GPD and ADH1 on pUTK401 (formerly pUA12B7) that constitutively express luxA and luxB to create pUTK407. Cotransformation of this plasmid with a second plasmid (pUTK404) containing the genes required for aldehyde synthesis (luxCDE) and FMN reduction (frp) yielded a bioluminescent bioreporter responsive to estrogen-disrupting compounds. For validation purposes, results with strain BLYES were compared to the colorimetric-based estrogenic assay that uses the yeast lacZ reporter strain (YES). Strains BLYES and YES were exposed to 17β-estradiol over the concentration range of 1.2 × 10−8 through 5.6 × 10−12 M. Calculated 50% effective concentration values from the colorimetric and bioluminescence assays (n = 7) were similar at (4.4 ± 1.1) × 10−10 and (2.4 ± 1.0) × 10−10 M, respectively. The lower and upper limits of detection for each assay were also similar and were approximately 4.5 × 10−11 to 2.8 × 10−9 M. Bioluminescence was observed in as little as 1 h and reached its maximum in 6 h. In comparison, the YES assay required a minimum of 3 days for results. Strain BLYES fills the niche for rapid, high-throughput screening of estrogenic compounds and has the ability to be used for remote, near-real-time monitoring of estrogen-disrupting chemicals in the environment.


Sensors | 2010

In Vivo Bioluminescent Imaging (BLI): Noninvasive Visualization and Interrogation of Biological Processes in Living Animals

Dan Close; Tingting Xu; Gary S. Sayler; Steven Ripp

In vivo bioluminescent imaging (BLI) is increasingly being utilized as a method for modern biological research. This process, which involves the noninvasive interrogation of living animals using light emitted from luciferase-expressing bioreporter cells, has been applied to study a wide range of biomolecular functions such as gene function, drug discovery and development, cellular trafficking, protein-protein interactions, and especially tumorigenesis, cancer treatment, and disease progression. This article will review the various bioreporter/biosensor integrations of BLI and discuss how BLI is being applied towards a new visual understanding of biological processes within the living organism.


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2002

Integrated CMOS photodetectors and signal processing for very low-level chemical sensing with the bioluminescent bioreporter integrated circuit

Eric K. Bolton; Gary S. Sayler; David E. Nivens; James M. Rochelle; Steven Ripp; Michael L. Simpson

We report an integrated CMOS microluminometer optimized for the detection of low-level bioluminescence as part of the bioluminescent bioreporter integrated circuit (BBIC). This microluminometer improves on previous devices through careful management of the sub-femtoampere currents, both signal and leakage, that flow in the front-end processing circuitry. In particular, the photodiode is operated with a reverse bias of only a few mV, requiring special attention to the reset circuitry of the current-to-frequency converter (CFC) that forms the front-end circuit. We report a sub-femtoampere leakage current and a minimum detectable signal (MDS) of 0.15 fA (1510 s integration time) using a room temperature 1.47 mm2 CMOS photodiode. This microluminometer can detect luminescence from as few as 5000 fully induced Pseudomonas fluorescens 5RL bacterial cells.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Autonomous Bioluminescent Expression of the Bacterial Luciferase Gene Cassette (lux) in a Mammalian Cell Line

Dan Close; Stacey S. Patterson; Steven Ripp; Seung Joon Baek; John Sanseverino; Gary S. Sayler

Background The bacterial luciferase (lux) gene cassette consists of five genes (luxCDABE) whose protein products synergistically generate bioluminescent light signals exclusive of supplementary substrate additions or exogenous manipulations. Historically expressible only in prokaryotes, the lux operon was re-synthesized through a process of multi-bicistronic, codon-optimization to demonstrate for the first time self-directed bioluminescence emission in a mammalian HEK293 cell line in vitro and in vivo. Methodology/Principal Findings Autonomous in vitro light production was shown to be 12-fold greater than the observable background associated with untransfected control cells. The availability of reduced riboflavin phosphate (FMNH2) was identified as the limiting bioluminescence substrate in the mammalian cell environment even after the addition of a constitutively expressed flavin reductase gene (frp) from Vibrio harveyi. FMNH2 supplementation led to a 151-fold increase in bioluminescence in cells expressing mammalian codon-optimized luxCDE and frp genes. When injected subcutaneously into nude mice, in vivo optical imaging permitted near instantaneous light detection that persisted independently for the 60 min length of the assay with negligible background. Conclusions/Significance The speed, longevity, and self-sufficiency of lux expression in the mammalian cellular environment provides a viable and powerful alternative for real-time target visualization not currently offered by existing bioluminescent and fluorescent imaging technologies.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2011

Bacteriophage reporter technology for sensing and detecting microbial targets

Abby E. Smartt; Steven Ripp

Bacteriophages (phages) are bacterial viruses evolutionarily tuned to very specifically recognize, infect, and propagate within only a unique pool of host cells. Knowledge of these phage host ranges permits one to devise diagnostic tests based on phage–host recognition profiles. For decades, fundamental phage typing assays have been used to identify bacterial pathogens on the basis of the ability of phages to kill, or lyse, the unique species, strain, or serovar to which they are naturally targeted. Over time, and with a better understanding of phage–host kinetics and the realization that there exists a phage specific for nearly any bacterial pathogen of clinical, foodborne, or waterborne consequence, a variety of improved, rapid, sensitive, and easy-to-use phage-mediated detection assays have been developed. These assays exploit every stage of the phage recognition and infection cycle to yield a wide variety of pathogen monitoring, detection, and enumeration formats that are steadily advancing toward new biosensor integrations and advanced sensing technologies.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 1998

Nucleic acid analytical approaches in bioremediation: site assessment and characterization

Raymond D Stapleton; Steven Ripp; Luis Jimenez; Sung Cheol-Koh; James T. Fleming; Igrid R. Gregory; Gary S. Sayler

Abstract Bioremediation, the removal of environmental pollutants by living organisms, has become a viable and promising means of restoring contaminated sites. Gene probing techniques have enhanced our ability to assess the efficacy of microbial-based remediation efforts. DNA probes targeting specific genetic sequences, i.e. those genes responsible for the degradative ability of the microorganism, can be used to characterize a contaminated site throughout the bioremediation program to determine overall community structure and catabolic activity. To do so, however, requires efficient techniques for recovering nucleic acids from environmental sites as well as methods for generating probes to the specific genetic sequences desired. This review discusses procedures for isolating DNA, messenger RNA, and ribosomal RNA from environmental samples, the utilization of polymerase chain reactions to construct gene probes, and hybridization methods to genetically match the probe to the environmental sample. The use of these methods and advancement of techniques at several bioremediation sites is also presented along with typical problems and limitations encountered. The first case study involves monitoring the effects of nutrient addition to stimulate microbial degradation of chlorinated solvents at the DOE Westinghouse Savannah River Site. The next case study describes the bioremediation of chlorinated solvents and low levels of BTEX at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware. The final study is a field-scale natural attenuation project currently underway at Columbus Air Force Base, Mississippi.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2012

Pathogen detection using engineered bacteriophages

Abby E. Smartt; Tingting Xu; Patricia Jegier; Jessica J. Carswell; Samuel A. Blount; Gary S. Sayler; Steven Ripp

Bacteriophages, or phages, are bacterial viruses that can infect a broad or narrow range of host organisms. Knowing the host range of a phage allows it to be exploited in targeting various pathogens. Applying phages for the identification of microorganisms related to food and waterborne pathogens and pathogens of clinical significance to humans and animals has a long history, and there has to some extent been a recent revival in these applications as phages have become more extensively integrated into novel detection, identification, and monitoring technologies. Biotechnological and genetic engineering strategies applied to phages are responsible for some of these new methods, but even natural unmodified phages are widely applicable when paired with appropriate innovative detector platforms. This review highlights the use of phages as pathogen detector interfaces to provide the reader with an up-to-date inventory of phage-based biodetection strategies.


Sensors and Actuators B-chemical | 2001

An integrated CMOS microluminometer for low-level luminescence sensing in the bioluminescent bioreporter integrated circuit.

Michael L. Simpson; Gary S. Sayler; Greg Patterson; David E. Nivens; Eric K. Bolton; James M. Rochelle; James C Arnott; Bruce M. Applegate; Steven Ripp; Michael A. Guillorn

We report an integrated CMOS microluminometer for the detection of low-level bioluminescence in whole cell biosensing applications. This microluminometer is the microelectronic portion of the bioluminescent bioreporter integrated circuit (BBIC). This device uses the n-well/p-substrate junction of a standard bulk CMOS IC process to form the integrated photodetector. This photodetector uses a distributed electrode configuration that minimizes detector noise. Signal processing is accomplished with a current-to-frequency converter circuit that forms the causal portion of the matched filter for dc luminescence in wide-band white noise. Measurements show that luminescence can be detected from as few as 4 x 10(5) cells/ml.


Microbiology | 1998

Dynamics of the pseudolysogenic response in slowly growing cells of Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Steven Ripp; Robert V. Miller

Pseudolysogeny is an environmental condition in which the starved bacterial cell coexists in an unstable relationship with infecting viral genomes. As nutrients are supplied to the bacterium, the pseudolysogens resolve into either true lysogeny or active production of virions. The direct result of pseudolysogenic relationships is an extension of the effective phage half-lives in natural environments. In this paper a continuous culture model of interactions between bacterial host organisms and bacteriophages leading to pseudolysogeny is presented. The pseudolysogenic state was found to depend on the concentration of nutrients available to the host. As cells became more starved, the frequency of pseudolysogens increased. The dependence on overall nutrient concentration was more dramatic than the variation in the generation time (chemostat turnover time) of the host. Thus, it appears that pseudolysogeny is a legitimate strategy for environmental bacteriophages to adapt to survive periods of starvation of their host organisms. Consideration of pseudolysogeny as a survival strategy is important to the development of any comprehensive model of host-bacteriophage relationships in natural environments.

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Dan Close

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Tingting Xu

University of Tennessee

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Michael L. Simpson

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Scott Moser

University of Tennessee

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