Sürdürülebilir Yeşil Kampüs Koleksiyonu / Sustainable Green Campus Collection
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7755
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Article Citation - WoS: 41Citation - Scopus: 43Chloride or Sulfate? Consequences for Ozonation of Textile Wastewater(Academic Press Inc., 2019) Öktem, Yalçın Aşkın; Yüzer, Burak; Ökten, Hatice Eser; Ökten, Hatice Eser; Meriç, Süreyya; Selçuk, Hüseyin; 03.07. Department of Environmental Engineering; 03. Faculty of Engineering; 01. Izmir Institute of TechnologyOzonation of chloride-rich textile wastewater is a common pretreatment practice in order to increase biodegradability and therefore meet the discharge limits. This study is the first to investigate ozone-chloride/bromide interactions and formation of hazardous adsorbable organic halogens (AOX) in real textile wastewater. Initially effect of ozonation on chloride-rich real textile wastewater samples were investigated for adsorbable organic halogens (AOX) formation, biodegradability and toxicity. After 15 min of ozonation, maximum levels of chlorine/bromine generation (0.3 mg/l) and AOX formation (399 mg/l) were reached. OUR and SOUR levels both increased by approximately 58%. Daphnia magna toxicity peaked at 100% for 10 min ozonated sample. Considering adverse effects of ozonation on chloride-rich textile industry effluents, we proposed replacement of NaCl with Na2SO4. Comparative ozonation experiments were carried out for both chloride and sulfate containing synthetic dyeing wastewater samples. Results showed that use of sulfate in reactive dyeing increased biodegradability and decreased acute toxicity. Although sulfate is preferred over chloride for more effective dyeing performance, the switch has been hampered due to sodium sulfate's higher unit cost. However, consideration of indirect costs such as contributions to biodegradability, toxicity, water and salt recovery shall facilitate textile industry's switch from chloride to sulfate.Master Thesis Elucidation of Molecular Mechanisms Conferring Arsenic Tolerance To Yeast Cells(Izmir Institute of Technology, 2016) Işık, Esin; Karakaya, Hüseyin Çağlar; Karakaya, Hüseyin Çağlar; 04.03. Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics; 04. Faculty of Science; 01. Izmir Institute of TechnologyArsenic is a highly toxic metalloid available in the environment mainly as arsenite or arsenate. These compounds’ interference with many molecular mechanisms results in several diseases including cancer. Conversely, arsenic is used in therapeutic approaches, however, they are associated with drug resistance. Although some tolerance and toxicity mechanisms of arsenicals in yeast have been enlightened by previous studies, complete understanding, which is important for development of protection and therapy strategies, has not yet been achieved. Comprehensive genome-wide screening is a promising approach for the elucidation of novel genes involved in arsenic-associated mechanisms. The aim in this study was to screen a yeast genome library to characterize novel genes whose overexpression confers resistance to toxic concentrations of arsenate or arsenite in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The plasmids from the colonies confirmed to be highly-resistant against arsenicals were sequenced to determine the genomic regions and seven genes were selected to clone into expression vectors. The overexpression of Pho86p and Vba3p provided yeast cells with the highest arsenate and arsenite resistance, respectively. Arsenate is a phosphate analogue and taken up by phosphate transporters. Pho86p is an ER-resident protein regulating ER-exit of the phosphate transporter. Therefore, it is reasonable that overexpression of Pho86p provides arsenate resistance. Vacuolar sequestration is a common route for the removal of toxic compounds from the cytosol and Vba3p is a vacuole-located transporter of basic amino acids with a likely role in arsenite resistance. Consequently, the screen in the current study revealed two genes with promising roles for tolerance mechanisms against arsenicals.
