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Dive into the research topics where V. S. Melamud is active.

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Featured researches published by V. S. Melamud.


Microbiology | 2003

[Sulfobacillus sibiricus sp. nov., a new moderately thermophilic bacterium].

V. S. Melamud; T. A. Pivovarova; T. P. Tourova; T. V. Kolganova; G. A. Osipov; Anatoly M. Lysenko; T. F. Kondrat'eva; G. I. Karavaiko

In the course of pilot industrial testing of a biohydrometallurgical technology for processing gold-arsenic concentrate obtained from the Nezhdaninskoe ore deposit (East Siberia, Sakha (Yakutiya)), a new gram-positive rod-shaped spore-forming moderately thermophilic bacterium (designated as strain N1) oxidizing Fe2+, S0, and sulfide minerals in the presence of yeast extract (0.02%) was isolated from a dense pulp. Physiologically, strain N1 differs from previously described species of the genus Sulfobacillus in having a somewhat higher optimal growth temperature (55°C). Unlike the type strain of S. thermosulfidooxidans, strain N1 could grow on a medium with 1 mM thiosulfate or sodium tetrathionate as a source of energy only within several passages and failed to grow in the absence of an inorganic energy source on media with sucrose, fructose, glucose, reduced glutathione, alanine, cysteine, sorbitol, sodium acetate, or pyruvate. The G+C content of the DNA of strain N1 was 48.2 mol %. The strain showed 42% homology after DNA–DNA hybridization with the type strain of S. thermosulfidooxidans and 10% homology with the type strain of S. acidophilus. The isolate differed from previously studied strains of S. thermosulfidooxidans in the structure of its chromosomal DNA (determined by the method of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis), which remained stable as growth conditions were changed. According to the results of the 16S rRNA gene analysis, the new strain forms a single cluster with the bacteria of the species Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans (sequence similarity of 97.9–98.6%). Based on these genetic and physiological features, strain N1 is described as a new species Sulfobacillus sibiricus sp. nov.


Microbiology | 2012

Diversity of the communities of acidophilic chemolithotrophic microorganisms in natural and technogenic ecosystems

T. F. Kondrat’eva; T. A. Pivovarova; I. A. Tsaplina; N. V. Fomchenko; A. E. Zhuravleva; M. I. Murav’ev; V. S. Melamud; A. G. Bulayev

The main representatives of acidophilic chemolithotrophs oxidizing sulfide minerals, ferrous iron, elemental sulfur, and reduced sulfur compounds and forming microbial communities in the natural and technogenic ecosystems with low pH values and high concentrations of heavy metal ions are listed. The species and strain diversity of the communities and environmental factors affecting their composition (temperature, pH value, energy substrate, mineralogical composition of sulfide ore concentrates, the presence of organic substances, and level of aeration) are analyzed. Involvement of mobile genetic elements (IS elements and plasmids) in the structural changes of the chromosomal DNA in the course of switching microbial metabolism to the oxidation of new energy substrates or under increased concentrations of metal ions is shown to be a probable mechanism responsible for the intraspecific genetic heterogeneity of the populations. Importance of determination of the dominant strains of different microbial species in the communities and of their physiological peculiarities for stabilization, optimization, and enhancement of efficiency of biotechnological processes for sulfide mineral oxidation is stressed.


Microbiology | 2003

Activity of the Enzymes of Carbon Metabolism in Sulfobacillus sibiricus under Various Conditions of Cultivation

L. M. Zakharchuk; M. A. Egorova; I. A. Tsaplina; T. I. Bogdanova; E. N. Krasil'nikova; V. S. Melamud; G. I. Karavaiko

The thermoacidophilic iron-oxidizing chemolithotroph Sulfobacillus sibiricus N1T is characterized by steady growth and amplified cell yield when grown in vigorously aerated medium containing Fe2+, glucose, and yeast extract as energy sources. In this case, carbon dioxide, glucose, and yeast extract are used as carbon sources. Glucose is assimilated through the fructose-bisphosphate pathway and the pentose-phosphate pathway. The glyoxylate bypass does not function in S. sibiricus, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle is disrupted at the level of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase. The presence of ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase indicates that carbon dioxide fixation proceeds through the Calvin cycle. The activity of ribulose-bisphosphate carboxylase is highest in autotrophically grown cells. The cells also contain pyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxytransphosphorylase.


Microbiology | 2011

Species composition of the association of acidophilic chemolithotrophic microorganisms participating in the oxidation of gold-arsenic ore concentrate

A. G. Bulaev; T. A. Pivovarova; V. S. Melamud; B. K. Bumazhkin; E. O. Patutina; T. V. Kolganova; B. B. Kuznetsov; T. F. Kondrat’eva

The species composition of the microbial association involved in industrial tank biooxidation of the concentrate of refractory pyrrhotite-containing pyrite-arsenopyrite gold-arsenic ore of the Olympiadinskoe deposit at 39°C was studied by cultural and molecular biological techniques. Pure microbial cultures were isolated, their physiological characteristics were investigated, and their taxonomic position was determined by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The library of 16S rRNA gene clones obtained from the total DNA isolated from the biomass of the pulp of industrial reactors was analyzed. The diversity of microorganisms revealed by cultural techniques in the association of acidophilic chemolithotrophs (Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans, Leptospirillum ferriphilum, Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans, Ferroplasma acidiphilum, Alicyclobacillus tolerans, and Acidiphilium cryptum) was higher than the diversity of the 16S rDNA clone library (At. ferrooxidans, L. ferriphilum, and F. acidiphilum). The combination of microbiological and molecular biological techniques for the investigation of the biodiversity in natural and anthropogenic microbial communities promotes detection of new phylogenetic microbial groups in these communities.


Microbiology | 2008

Genotypic and phenotypic polymorphism of environmental strains of the moderately thermophilic bacterium Sulfobacillus sibiricus

I. A. Tsaplina; T. I. Bogdanova; T. F. Kondrat’eva; V. S. Melamud; Anatoly M. Lysenko; G. I. Karavaiko

Five cultures of moderately thermophilic spore-forming acidophilic chemolithotrophic bacteria were isolated from the zones of spontaneous heating of pyrrhotite-containing pyrite-arsenopyrite gold-arsenic sulfide ores in an operating open pit (strains B1, B2, B3, OFO, and SSO). Analysis of the chromosomal DNA structure revealed the differences between these cultures at the strain level (apart from B3 and SSO, which had identical restriction profiles). All the strains had a similar G+C DNA molar content (47.4–48.3%). The level of DNA reassociation was 85 to 95%. The similarity between the DNA of the type strain Sulfobacillus sibiricus N1 isolated from arsenopyrite ore concentrate and that of these strains (83–93%) indicates that they belong to the same species. The strains had similar values of pH and temperature optimal for growth on ferrous iron (1.6–2.0 and 45–55°C, respectively). They were mixotrophs; Fe(II), So, and sulfide minerals along with organic compounds were used as energy sources and electron donors. However, the kinetic parameters of growth and substrate oxidation varied from strain to strain. Genetic variety of the strains from diverse ecosystems and environments is possibly the result of the different rates of microevolution processes.


Microbiology | 2011

Polymorphism of Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans strains dominating in processes of high-temperature oxidation of gold-arsenic concentrate

A. G. Bulaev; T. A. Pivovarova; V. S. Melamud; I. A. Tsaplina; A. E. Zhuravleva; T. F. Kondrat’eva

The composition was studied of the microbial association involved in tank biooxidation of the concentrate of a refractory pyrrhotite-containing pyrite-arsenopyrite gold-arsenic ore from the Olympiadinskoe deposit at 50°C. The two Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans strains predominant in the association were phylogenetically different from the strains used as inocula. The isolates were found to differ significantly both from each other and from the strains that dominated in the processes of biooxidation of a similar concentrate by traditional tank technology at 39°C or at 39°C with treatment of the concentrate with ferric iron prior to biooxidation. These results indicate the strain and species diversity of sulfobacilli in microbial associations involved in biooxidation of the concentrates under different technological modes.


Applied Biochemistry and Microbiology | 2010

Species and strain composition of microbial associations oxidizing different types of gold-bearing concentrates

T. A. Pivovarova; V. S. Melamud; E. E. Savari; G. V. Sedel’nikova; T. F. Kondrat’eva

Quantitative abundance of microbial species within an association was found to depend on the energy substrate and the oxidation temperature of sulfide minerals. The number of microbial cells varied depending on the position of reactor in the chain, i.e., the stage of the energy substrate oxidation. Microbial associations oxidized the energy substrate more efficiently than any of their individual components. The increase in pulp density up to the solid: liquid ratio of 1: 2.5 had an unfavorable effect on microorganisms comprising microbial associations.


Microbiology | 2015

Leaching of rare earth elements from coal ashes using acidophilic chemolithotrophic microbial communities

Maxim I. Muravyov; A. G. Bulaev; V. S. Melamud; T. F. Kondrat’eva

A method for leaching rare earth elements from coal ash in the presence of elemental sulfur-oxidizing communities of acidophilic chemolithotrophic microorganisms was proposed. The optimal parameters determined for rare element leaching in reactors were as follows: temperature, 45°C; initial pH, 2.0; pulp density, 10%; and the coal ash to elemental sulfur ratio, 10 : 1. After ten days of leaching, 52.0, 52.6, and 59.5% of scandium, yttrium, and lanthanum, respectively, were recovered.


Microbiology | 2012

Biooxidation of a gold-containing sulfide concentrate in relation to changes in physical and chemical conditions

I. A. Tsaplina; A. E. Zhuravleva; N. V. Grigor’eva; A. V. Belyi; T. A. Pivovarova; A. G. Bulaev; V. S. Melamud; T. F. Kondrat’eva

The growth of a microbial community and the oxidation of iron- and sulfur-containing substrates in batch culture during the leaching/oxidation of the flotation concentrate of refractory gold-arsenic sulfide ore were optimized with respect to the following medium parameters: temperature, pH, and requirement in organic substances. It was revealed that the optimum mode is (i) to maintain the pH at 1.6–1.7 and the temperature at 34–35 and 38°C and (ii) to add Corg in the form of yeast extract (0.02%). Mutually beneficial or competitive relationships among groups of microorganisms of the community were established, depending on the cultivation conditions.


Microbiology | 2014

Leaching of pyrite-arsenopyrite concentrate in bioreactors during continuous cultivation of a thermoacidophilic microbial community

I. A. Tsaplina; A. E. Panyushkina; V. S. Melamud; N. V. Grigor’eva; T. F. Kondrat’eva

A community of thermoacidophilic chemolithotrophic microorganisms was shown to exhibit enhanced efficiency of leaching and biooxidation of the gold-bearing pyrite-arsenopyrite flotation concentrate in continuous mode of cultivation. Under the optimal values of growth parameters, the degree of oxidation of sulfide arsenic, iron, sulfur, and antimony in the line of three laboratory reactors (D = 0.004 h−1) was 99.55, 98.87, 99.65, and 97.08%, respectively, while gold recovery from the solid biooxidation residue was 97.4%.

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T. A. Pivovarova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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I. A. Tsaplina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. G. Bulaev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. E. Zhuravleva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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G. I. Karavaiko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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T. F. Kondrat'eva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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T. I. Bogdanova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. V. Fomchenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. V. Grigor’eva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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