Genomic Analysis of Halophilic Ureolytic Bacteria and its Applications in Sustainable Construction Materials
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Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology
Abstract
Environmental salinity poses a significant challenge to sustainable construction particularly
in coastal and arid regions where conventional building materials degrade faster. In the
present study, a halophilic ureolytic bacterium, Bacillus paramycoides MD6 was evaluated
for its potential in Microbially Induced Calcium Carbonate Precipitation (MICCP) under
saline conditions. The isolate exhibited high Urease activity (up to 599 U/mL at 2.5% NaCl)
and Carbonic anhydrase activity (105 U/mL at 0% NaCl followed by 2.5% - 102 U/mL and
3.5%- 90 U/mL), both of which declined at increasing salt concentrations indicating that
moderate salinity supports optimal enzymatic performance. The bacterium also demonstrated
effective Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) precipitation (maximum 195 mg at 0% NaCl followed
by 2.5% and 3.5%) which confirmed its ability to biomineralize even under mild salt stress.
Mortar cubes treated with MD6 culture showed enhanced compressive strength (up to 28.3 ±
0.7 MPa) and reduced water absorption (0.073 g/cm2
) indicating improved durability. Wholegenome analysis revealed the presence of key genes for urease, carbonic anhydrases and wide
range of salt tolerant genes. These findings suggest that B. paramycoides MD6 is a promising
candidate for environmentally friendly and durable bio-construction in saline environments.
Description
M.Sc. thesis
