Microbial communities in bentonite formations and their interactions with uranium
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111650Metadatos
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2014-07-02Referencia bibliográfica
Lopez-Fernandez, M., Fernandez-Sanfrancisco, O., Moreno-Garcia, A., Martin-Sanchez, I., Sanchez-Castro, I., & Merroun, M. L. (2014). Microbial communities in bentonite formations and their interactions with uranium. Applied geochemistry, 49, 77-86.
Resumen
A reliable performance assessment of deep geological disposal of nuclear waste depends on better knowledge
of radionuclide interactions with natural microbes of geological formations (granitic rock, clay,
salts) used to host these disposal systems. In Spain, clay deposits from Cabo de Gata region, Almeria,
are investigated for this purpose. The present work characterizes the culture-dependent microbial diversity
of two bentonite samples (BI and BII) recovered from Spanish clay deposits. The evaluation of aerobe
and facultative anaerobe microbial populations shows the presence of a high number of cultivable bacteria
(e.g. Stenotrophomonas, Micrococcus, Arthrobacter, Kocuria, Sphingomonas, Bacillus, Pseudomonas, etc.)
affiliated to three phyla Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Firmicutes. In addition, a pigmented yeast
strain BII-R8 related to Rhodotorula mucilaginosa was also recovered from these formations. The minimal
inhibitory concentrations of uranium for the growth of these natural isolates were found to range from 4
to 10.0 mM. For instance, strain R. mucilaginosa BII-R8 was shown to tolerate up to 8 mM of U. Flow
cytometry studies indicated that the high U tolerance of this yeast isolate is a biologically mediated process.
Microscopically dense intracellular and cell wall-bound precipitates were observed by Scanning
Transmission Electron Microscopy-High-Angle Annular Dark-Field (STEM-HAADF). Energy Dispersive
X-ray (EDX) element-distribution maps showed the presence of U and P within these accumulates,
indicating the ability of cells to precipitate U as U(VI) phosphate minerals. Fundamental understanding
of the microbial diversity of clays and microbial interaction with radionuclides will be useful in predicting
the microbial impacts on the performance of the waste repositories, as well as in the development of
bioremediation strategies for U contaminated sites.





