DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF BACTERIAL ISOLATES EXPRESSING BLUE AND GREEN FLUORESCING PROTEINS (BFP AND GFP) AS ALTERNATIVES TO CONVENTIONAL DNA- AND PROTEIN-SPECIFIC FLUORESCENCE STAINING FOR STUDYING BACTERIAL TRANSPORT BEHAVIOR IN GRANULAR MEDIA
Three microbial isolates were employed. A motile Pseudomonas stutzeri isolated from a fractured-granite aquifer (Mirror Lake, NH) and a non-motile, mutant strain of the aforementioned isolate were transformed with plasmids containing gfp and bfp genes and ampicillin resistance. In addition, a chemotactic strain of Escherichia coli was transformed using a gfp-plasmid.
Results from survival experiments indicated that BFP-expressing P. stutzeri have decay rates about an order of magnitude higher than GFP-expressing E. coli. Flow-through column experiments (2.5 cm x 15 cm) involving sandy [0.59 mm, median grain size] aquifer sediments (3.5% Fe content) and a flow rate of 0.4 m/day were performed using DAPI, CFDA-SE (carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester, a protein-specific fluorescent stain) and BFP-labeled P. stutzeri. Fractional recoveries in the column effluent were 7.7%, 37.8%, and 44.1%, respectively. In another study employing similar grain size and flow rate, about 30% of introduced GFP-labeled E. coli were recovered.
These experiments suggest that bacterial isolates expressing fluorescent labels provide a useful alternative to use of DNA-specific fluorochrome dyes or to more laborious molecular-based labeling techniques. The fluorescent proteins appear to be stable for a number of weeks since transformed bacteria were still detectable after nearly a month in survival experiments. This suggests wide applicability for field-scale injection and recovery tests.