March 2002
The Mason Gazette


Spotlight on Research

Research Seeks Solution to One of Oil's Environmental Woes

During oil drilling, water is pumped into wells to force the oil out, and every gallon of oil brought to the surface brings with it four to seven gallons of oil-contaminated water, or produce water, creating a serious disposal problem.

"There's no good treatment system for that water right now," says Carol Litchfield, associate professor of Biology. "In some places, they just pump it right back down into the wells, pump it over the side, or put it in barrels to bring to shore for treatment."

Litchfield and her students are looking for an answer to the problem in an unlikely source: salt-loving bacteria called halophiles that can degrade the oil in produce water. "Most often, the oil is below or within salt layers, so when the water goes down it picks up the salt and becomes brine," says Litchfield. "The brine concentration can be anywhere from 5 to 15 percent, and ordinary soil bacteria can't degrade the oil then."

The key to the halophiles' effectiveness as a treatment method seems to lie in the salinity of the water. Last semester, Litchfield and students in her Biology 611 Techniques in Environmental Microbe course looked at degraders in samples from the Gulf of Mexico, which would grow in 8 to 15 percent salt brine. This salt range is similar to that found in produce water. In these samples, the students found a mixed halophile community that will clear oil in an 8 percent salt, 1 percent oil sample in 48 hours. The next step is to isolate the bacteria and find out what portions of oil they are degrading in the hope of producing the bacteria synthetically and creating a mechanism for treating the contaminated water, says Litchfield. This summer, graduate student Raji Ganguli will look at ways to improve the degradation rate and try to determine exactly what compounds are being degraded.

Although the research is preliminary at this point, Litchfield believes they are about two to three years from having something they could approach an oil company with. "If we can get it to operate over a range of 5 to 15 percent, we will really have something that is worthwhile," says Litchfield. "Indications are that we probably do."

- Lynn Burke

Professor Receives Grant to Assist Adolescent Literacy

Elizabeth G. Sturtevant, associate professor and co-coordinator of the literacy program in the Graduate School of Education, is part of a team of educators that received a $48,600 grant from the Carnegie Corporation, in collaboration with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, to help develop ways to improve adolescent literacy and locate effective programs in large urban school districts. The team comprises professors from the University of Georgia, the State University of New York at Buffalo, Arizona State University, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, and Syracuse University. Sturtevant's team has until June 30 to develop a proposal outlining teaching practices that help increase adolescent literacy and address the difficulties that arise in helping all adolescents develop higher literacy levels. "With more and more young people pursuing a college education and highly technical careers, a more advanced literacy level is important for all students," says Sturtevant.

The proposal will include a process for conducting research on adolescent literacy in urban schools, as well as criteria for video technology production. The team also will develop a series of videos that highlight excellent programs in large urban districts and help young people become more involved in learning. The videos will be shown to focus groups in urban areas around the country. The project focuses on students as early as the fourth grade. "Fourth to seventh grade is a crucial period, because a lot of children make decisions about whether they're going to try harder or not try harder, to like school or dislike school," says Sturtevant. "They're starting to make choices about what kind of courses they might take in high school, and that can affect their whole future."

- Joseph J. Urban III

George Mason Announces New Center for Biodefense

George Mason's new Center for Biodefense represents not only a new major initiative on the university's part, but also a convergence of arguably the best of the East and the West in the field of biological warfare and defense infectious diseases.

The appointment of Kenneth Alibek, former first deputy chief of the Civilian Branch of the former Soviet Union's Offensive Biological Weapons Program, and Charles Bailey, former commander for research at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, as executive administrators of the center solidifies an alliance that gives the university greater national and even international visibility and puts George Mason among the leaders in efforts to identify effective ways to combat biological terrorism and the proliferation of biological weapons. Joining Alibek and Bailey as directors of the center are Vikas Chandhoke, associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and James Willett of the School of Computational Sciences and Informatics.

"We are proud of the team we have assembled to direct our Center for Biodefense," says President Alan Merten. "Because of these people, the center has the potential to make a significant impact upon the entire world."

In addition to their positions within the center, Alibek carries the title of Distinguished Professor of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, while Bailey carries the title of Distinguished Professor of Biology. Both are members of the university's College of Arts and Sciences.

Alibek served in the Soviet Union's Offensive Biological Weapons Program for more than 20 years. He defected to the United States in 1992 and subsequently served as a consultant to numerous U.S. government agencies in the areas of industrial technology, medical microbiology, biological weapons defense, and biological weapons proliferation.

Bailey spent 25 years in research and development and managerial roles for the U.S. Army in the field of infectious diseases and biological warfare defense. The results of his hands-on experiments with a wide variety of infectious agents have been published in more than 70 scientific articles in refereed books and journals.

According to Merten, the Center for Biodefense will focus on research and creating curricula to better train doctors and first responders. "It is our vision that this center and the work of its scientists will ultimately lessen the threat of biological warfare and reduce the threat of biological agents as instruments of terror," he added.

To be housed at George Mason's Prince William Campus, the center is the result of a new collaboration between the university and Advanced Biosystems Inc.

- Daniel Walsch