Literature DB >> 17265940

Reduction of Cr(VI) under acidic conditions by the facultative Fe(lll)-reducing bacterium Acidiphilium cryptum.

David E Cummings1, Scott Fendorf, Nathan Singh, Rajesh K Sani, Brent M Peyton, Timothy S Magnuson.   

Abstract

The potential for biological reduction of Cr(VI) under acidic conditions was evaluated with the acidophilic, facultatively metal-reducing bacterium Acidiphilium cryptum strain JF-5 to explore the role of acidophilic microorganisms in the Cr cycle in low-pH environments. An anaerobic suspension of washed A. cryptum cells rapidly reduced 50 microM Cr(VI) at pH 3.2; biological reduction was detected from pH 1.7-4.7. The reduction product, confirmed by XANES analysis, was entirely Cr(III) that was associated predominantly with the cell biomass (70-80%) with the residual residing in the aqueous phase. Reduction of Cr(VI) showed a pH optimum similar to that for growth and was inhibited by 5 mM HgCl2, suggesting that the reaction was enzyme-mediated. Introduction of O2 into the reaction medium slowed the reduction rate only slightly, whereas soluble Fe(III) (as ferric sulfate) increased the rate dramatically, presumably by the shuttling of electrons from bioreduced Fe(II) to Cr(VI) in a coupled biotic-abiotic cycle. Starved cells could not reduce Cr(VI) when provided as sole electron acceptor, indicating that Cr(VI) reduction is not an energy-conserving process in A. cryptum. We speculate, rather, that Cr(VI) reduction is used here as a detoxification mechanism.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17265940     DOI: 10.1021/es061333k

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  8 in total

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2.  The hydroxyectoine gene cluster of the non-halophilic acidophile Acidiphilium cryptum.

Authors:  Katharina D Moritz; Birgit Amendt; Elisabeth M H J Witt; Erwin A Galinski
Journal:  Extremophiles       Date:  2014-08-21       Impact factor: 2.395

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6.  Indirect Redox Transformations of Iron, Copper, and Chromium Catalyzed by Extremely Acidophilic Bacteria.

Authors:  D Barrie Johnson; Sabrina Hedrich; Eva Pakostova
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7.  An Exploratory Study on the Pathways of Cr (VI) Reduction in Sulfate-reducing Up-flow Anaerobic Sludge Bed (UASB) Reactor.

Authors:  Jin Qian; Li Wei; Rulong Liu; Feng Jiang; Xiaodi Hao; Guang-Hao Chen
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-03-29       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  Insights into the Metabolism and Evolution of the Genus Acidiphilium, a Typical Acidophile in Acid Mine Drainage.

Authors:  Liangzhi Li; Zhenghua Liu; Min Zhang; Delong Meng; Xueduan Liu; Pei Wang; Xiutong Li; Zhen Jiang; Shuiping Zhong; Chengying Jiang; Huaqun Yin
Journal:  mSystems       Date:  2020-11-17       Impact factor: 6.496

  8 in total

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