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E. Coli Can Be Used To Clean Up Nuclear Waste

jerryjamesstone writes "Researchers have found that E. coli can be used to recover uranium from tainted waters and can even be used to clean up nuclear waste. Using the bacteria along with inositol phosphate, the bacteria breaks down the phosphate — also called phytic acid — to free the phosphate molecules. The phosphate then binds to the uranium forming a uranium-phosphate precipitate on the cells of the bacteria. Those cells can then be harvested to recover the uranium." What has made this 14-year-old process economically feasible is the use of inositol phosphate, which is a cheap waste material from the production feedstock from plant material.

9 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Just cuddling by Goffee71 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Surely the e-coli just wants to cuddle up to something warm, nothing unusual in that

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    If he's the Walrus then can I be a penguin please?
  2. Radioactive e-coli? by Thanshin · · Score: 4, Funny

    Someone's bound to get bitten, and then what?

    Will e-coliman protect us from the villains?

  3. Ingenious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    So a combined chemical and biological threat can defeat a nuclear one, after all!

    1. Re:Ingenious by selven · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you ever find yourself in a chemical, biological nuclear zone with a guy shooting you in the head every five seconds or so, take out your laptop and read this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_immortality

  4. Bad timing by celibate+for+life · · Score: 4, Funny

    Had they discovered that a couple of years ago they could have used all that e-coli infested frozen spinach that went to waste!

    1. Re:Bad timing by master5o1 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Children are not bacteria. They may seem like it some times, but they're not.

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      signature is pants
  5. Hah! then... by garompeta · · Score: 4, Funny

    Does it mean that McDonalds is a safe place to hide in a nuclear war?

  6. Naturally by bytesex · · Score: 4, Funny

    Uranium is the element named after Uranus, right ? No wonder it attracts E.Coli.

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    Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
  7. Re:I for one... by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not really a worry.

    First off, naturally occurring Uranium isn't all that radioactive. For the most part its U238, which doesn't give off much radiation. And, spent reactor fuel is even more skewed towards U238, otherwise known as Depleted Uranium, the stuff the military uses for armor piercing bullets. You can hold either of this stuff in your bare hands and not have any ill effects. One thing to keep in mind with radioactive materials, the stuff which has half lives of millions or billions of years (U238 is 4.46 billion years, U235 is 703 Million years) isn't producing a heck of a lot of ionizing radiation. The problem with Uranium is that it is a toxic heavy metal, and like other toxic heavy metals (lead, thorium) it will deposit in your internal organs, build up and eventually kill you.

    The second problem with the mutated E. Coli of Death is that the vast majority of mutations will result death fairly quickly. Of the ones which don't, they will probably just result in death slowly. Yes, the E. Coil could get some sort of useful mutation out of it, but it's not really more likely to happen in this cleanup site than anywhere else.

    --
    Necessity is the mother of invention.
    Laziness is the father.