Effect of substrate mineralogy, biofilm and extracellular polymeric substances on bacterially induced carbonate mineralisation investigated with in situ nanoscale ToF-SIMS
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Aishwarya Dubey, Anant; Toprak, Pelina; Pring, Allan; Rodríguez Navarro, Carlos Manuel; Mukherjee, Abhijit; K. Dhami, NavdeepEditorial
Nature Publishing Group
Materia
Biomineralisation Calcium carbonate polymorph selection Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS)
Date
2025-08-11Referencia bibliográfica
Dubey, A.A., Toprak, P., Pring, A. et al. Effect of substrate mineralogy, biofilm and extracellular polymeric substances on bacterially induced carbonate mineralisation investigated with in situ nanoscale ToF-SIMS. Sci Rep 15, 29368 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-14083-z
Sponsorship
ARC Discovery project (DP220101990); Australian Research Council; Spanish Government (grants PID2021.125305NB. I00)Abstract
Bacterial mineralisation of calcium carbonates (CaCO3) has become a focal point of interest in
the scientific community owing to their versatile applications as biomaterials. However, despite
extensive research, the knowledge on factors influencing biogenic CaCO3 polymorph (calcite, vaterite
or aragonite) selection in nature remains obscure. Bacterial mineralisation happens in nature on
diverse substrates by different pathways, often in the presence of organic matter such as biofilm and
extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) secreted with the regular metabolic activities of microbes.
This study examines the bacterial CaCO3 mineralisation process by two distinct pathways on different
natural substrates with advanced analytical techniques, including Time of Flight- Secondary Ions
Mass Spectrometry (ToF-SIMS). A high EPS-producing microbe (Bacillus subtilis, BS) was compared
with the standard ureolytic strain (Sporosarcina pasteurii, SP). Natural geological minerals, including
apatite, calcite and quartz, were selected as substrates. This study demonstrates that SP favours the
precipitation of rhombohedral calcite crystals (2 to 40 μm in size), regardless of the mineral substrate.
In contrast, the EPS-producing BS culture induced the formation of significantly larger vaterite
structures (20 to 100 μm in size) in spheroid and hexagonal shapes. The mineralogy of precipitates was
confirmed with Raman spectroscopy. ToF-SIMS enabled the spatial tracking of organic macromolecules
and the adsorption of calcium ions on them. The functional groups of the EPS involved in these
interactions were characterised by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR). This study reveals
that microbial activity dominates over substrate mineralogy in selecting the phase and shaping the
morphology of biogenic CaCO3, with EPS playing a crucial role in promoting the aggregation of small
nanocrystals into large vaterite structures and their stabilisation.





