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1.
Front Microbiol ; 13: 909997, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35898903

RESUMO

The ever-increasing complexity in critical spacecraft hardware and materials has led to the development of new microbial reduction procedures as well as to changes in established processes such as heat microbial reduction (HMR). In the space biology field of Planetary Protection, 500°C for 0.5 s is the current HMR recommendation to reduce microorganisms from flight hardware. However, more studies are needed to effectively determine the microbial reduction capability of high-temperature (more than 200°C), short-duration (under 30 s) heat exposures. One of the many recent microbial reduction bioengineering research avenues harnesses electromagnetic energy for microbial reduction, with previous investigations demonstrating that infrared heaters are capable of the short temperature ramp time required for rapid heating investigations above 200°C. Therefore, this study employed a 6 kW infrared heater to determine the survivability of heat resistant Bacillus canaveralius 29669 to high-temperature, short-duration infrared temperatures. While B. canaveralius 29669 spores can survive microbial heat reduction processes above 200°C, we found evidence suggesting that the 500°C for 0.5 s temperature sterilization specification for Planetary Protection should be updated. This research presents spore survival data and a corresponding model pointing to a re-evaluation of the recommended HMR exposure of 500°C for 0.5 s, while simultaneously meeting requirements on the forward biological contamination of solar system bodies and opening up design possibilities for future spacecraft hardware.

2.
Genome Announc ; 3(3)2015 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26089414

RESUMO

Luchador and Nerujay are two newly isolated mycobacteriophages recovered from soil samples using Mycobacterium smegmatis. Their genomes are 53,387 bp and 53,455 bp long and have 96 and 97 predicted open reading frames, respectively. Nerujay is related to subcluster A1 phages, and Luchador represents a new subcluster, A14.

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