The pollution of nickle ion is a very serious environmental problem in China. This kind of pollution
is different from that of other organic compounds. Nickel ions are a common pollutant, and do not
easily degrade in the environment. To solve this problem, this year we integrated protein genes (which
are capable of absorbing nickel ions) into the chromosomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, so that the
nickel ions in the environment can be accumulated in the vacuoles of these yeast cells, thus reducing
nickel ion concentrations in the environment. Secondly, we integrated the system of the E. coli itself
with the original nickel ion detection bioaccumulation block, and created a brand new system. By
increasing the signal to noise ratio of the system via the nickel ion channel protein, the accuracy
of the detection is improved. The new fluorescein protein we used this time can light itself without
the need of an external light source. We also plan to link the E. coli detection system to an APP
using the transmission of electrical signals, so as to achieve real-time detection.
Is this merely accumulation, or does the yeast actually alter the ions in any way?