Deep-Sea Bacteria Could Help Neutralize Greenhouse Gas, Researchers Find

Bacteria could be put to work neutralizing large amounts of industrial carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere, University of Florida researchers have found

Written byUniversity of Florida
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Carbon dioxide, a major contributor to the buildup of atmospheric greenhouse gases, can be captured and neutralized in a process known as sequestration. Most atmospheric carbon dioxide is produced from fossil fuel combustion, a waste known as flue gas. But converting the carbon dioxide into a harmless compound requires a durable, heat-tolerant enzyme. That’s where the bacterium studied by University of Florida Health researchers comes into play. The bacterium–Thiomicrospira crunogena–produces carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme that helps remove carbon dioxide in organisms.

So what makes the deep-sea bacterium so attractive? It lives near hydrothermal vents, so the enzyme it produces is accustomed to high temperatures. That’s exactly what’s needed for the enzyme to work during the process of reducing industrial carbon dioxide, said Robert McKenna, PhD, a professor of biochemistry and molecular biology in the UF College of Medicine, a part of UF Health.

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