| Literature DB >> 25188470 |
Xiumei Yu1, Yanmei Li1, Chu Zhang1, Huiying Liu1, Jin Liu1, Wenwen Zheng1, Xia Kang1, Xuejun Leng2, Ke Zhao1, Yunfu Gu1, Xiaoping Zhang1, Quanju Xiang1, Qiang Chen1.
Abstract
To provide a basis for using indigenous bacteria for bioremediation of heavy metal contaminated soil, the heavy metal resistance and plant growth-promoting activity of 136 isolates from V-Ti magnetite mine tailing soil were systematically analyzed. Among the 13 identified bacterial genera, the most abundant genus was Bacillus (79 isolates) out of which 32 represented B. subtilis and 14 B. pumilus, followed by Rhizobium sp. (29 isolates) and Ochrobactrum intermedium (13 isolates). Altogether 93 isolates tolerated the highest concentration (1000 mg kg(-1)) of at least one of the six tested heavy metals. Five strains were tolerant against all the tested heavy metals, 71 strains tolerated 1,000 mg kg(-1) cadmium whereas only one strain tolerated 1,000 mg kg(-1) cobalt. Altogether 67% of the bacteria produced indoleacetic acid (IAA), a plant growth-promoting phytohormone. The concentration of IAA produced by 53 isolates was higher than 20 µg ml(-1). In total 21% of the bacteria produced siderophore (5.50-167.67 µg ml(-1)) with two Bacillus sp. producing more than 100 µg ml(-1). Eighteen isolates produced both IAA and siderophore. The results suggested that the indigenous bacteria in the soil have beneficial characteristics for remediating the contaminated mine tailing soil.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25188470 PMCID: PMC4154735 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0106618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The basic physicochemical properties and heavy metal concentrations in V-Ti magnetite mine tailing soil.
| Properties | Average value | Minimum value | Maximum value |
| pH | 5.28±0.91 | 4.48 | 6.34 |
| Organic matter (‰) | 16.98±4.45 | 12.72 | 22.29 |
| Total N (mg kg−1) | 103.50±36.84 | 72.85 | 153.73 |
| Available N (mg kg−1) | 13.64±8.03 | 8.46 | 25.60 |
| Available K (mg kg−1) | 11.71±3.86 | 7.21 | 15.98 |
| Available P (mg kg−1) | 11.08±1.82 | 8.87 | 13.15 |
| As (mg kg−1) | 0.94±0.58 | 0.47 | 1.77 |
| Fe (mg kg−1) | 76145.84±3715.20 | 70782.50 | 78647.50 |
| Ti (mg kg−1) | 28185.84±3264.46 | 23976.67 | 31596.67 |
| V (mg kg−1) | 5584.38±2457.28 | 2974.00 | 7595.00 |
| Cr (mg kg−1) | 98.51±9.20 | 90.61 | 111.72 |
| Mn (mg kg−1) | 1417.17±141.02 | 1268.33 | 1543.75 |
| Zn (mg kg−1) | 87.72±20.27 | 69.21 | 106.59 |
| Cu (mg kg−1) | 56.75±30.65 | 30.05 | 95.58 |
| Ni (mg kg−1) | 48.11±12.23 | 38.40 | 65.34 |
| Pb (mg kg−1) | 6.90±1.37 | 5.62 | 8.84 |
| Cd (mg kg−1) | 0.52±0.25 | 0.19 | 0.78 |
Figure 1Neighbor-joining tree based on 16S rRNA sequences of isolated representative bacteria strains from V-Ti magnetite mine tailing soil by MEGA 6.
The scale bar corresponds to 0.05 substitutions per nucleotide position. The numbers at nodes indicated the levels of bootstrap support (%) based on 1,000 resampled data sets; only values above 50% are given. Superscript “T” means type stains; Number in parentheses represents the sequence number in GenBank. Nanoarchaeum equitans Kin4-M was used as an outgroup.
Figure 2The minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) of bacterial isolates against six heavy metals.
Pb, lead; Cd, cadmium; Zn, zinc; Cu, copper; Co, cobalt; Ni, nickel.