Bio-precipitation of uranium by two bacterial isolates recovered from extreme environments as estimated by potentiometric titration, TEM and X-ray absorption spectroscopic analyses
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Merroun, Mohamed Larbi; Nedelkova, Marta; Ojeda, Jesús J.; Reitz, Thomas; López Fernández, Margarita; Arias, José M.; Romero-González, María; Selenska-Pobell, SonjaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Uranium biomineralization Potentiometric titration XAS
Fecha
2011-10-02Referencia bibliográfica
M.L. Merroun et al. Bio-precipitation of uranium by two bacterial isolates recovered from extreme environments as estimated by potentiometric titration, TEM and X-ray absorption spectroscopic analyses. Journal of Hazardous Materials, 197, 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2011.09.049
Patrocinador
European Community FIKW-CT-2000-00105 (BORIS); Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación CGL2009-09760; Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia CGL2007-61489; “Ramón y Cajal Fellow” University of Granada; UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), DIAMOND Consortium (EP/F055412/1)Resumen
This work describes the mechanisms of uranium biomineralization at acidic conditions by Bacillus sphaericus
JG-7B and Sphingomonas sp. S15-S1 both recovered from extreme environments. The U–bacterial
interaction experiments were performed at low pH values (2.0–4.5) where the uranium aqueous speciation
is dominated by highly mobile uranyl ions. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) showed that
the cells of the studied strains precipitated uranium at pH 3.0 and 4.5 as a uranium phosphate mineral
phase belonging to the meta-autunite group. Transmission electron microscopic (TEM) analyses showed
strain-specific localization of the uranium precipitates. In the case of B. sphaericus JG-7B, the U(VI) precipitate
was bound to the cell wall. Whereas for Sphingomonas sp. S15-S1, the U(VI) precipitates were
observed both on the cell surface and intracellularly. The observed U(VI) biomineralization was associated
with the activity of indigenous acid phosphatase detected at these pH values in the absence of an
organic phosphate substrate. The biomineralization of uranium was not observed at pH 2.0, and U(VI)
formed complexes with organophosphate ligands from the cells. This study increases the number of bacterial
strains that have been demonstrated to precipitate uranium phosphates at acidic conditions via the
activity of acid phosphatase.





