Effect of U(VI) aqueous speciation on the binding of uranium by the cell surface of Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, a natural yeast isolate from bentonites
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/51526Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
López Fernández, Margarita; Romero González, María Esther; Günther, Alix; Solari, Pier L.; Merroun, Mohamed LarbiEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Uranium biosorption Cell surface Speciation Yeast Rhodotorula Spectroscopy Microscopy
Date
2018-02-09Referencia bibliográfica
Lopez-Fernandez, Margarita; et. al. Effect of U(VI) aqueous speciation on the binding of uranium by the cell surface of Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, a natural yeast isolate from bentonites. Chemosphere 199 (2018) 351-360 [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/51526]
Patrocinador
This work was funded by Grants CGL2009-09760, BES-2010- 032098, EEBB-I-12-04964 and CGL-2012-36505 (80% finding by FEDER) (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, España).Résumé
This study presents the effect of aqueous uranium speciation (U-hydroxides and U-hydroxo-carbonates)
on the interaction of this radionuclide with the cells of the yeast Rhodotorula mucigilanosa BII-R8. This
strain was isolated from Spanish bentonites considered as reference materials for the engineered barrier
components of the future deep geological repository of radioactive waste. X-ray absorption and infrared
spectroscopy showed that the aqueous uranium speciation has no effect on the uranium binding process
by this yeast strain. The cells bind mobile uranium species (U-hydroxides and U-hydroxo-carbonates)
from solution via a time-dependent process initiated by the adsorption of uranium species to carboxyl
groups. This leads to the subsequent involvement of organic phosphate groups forming uranium complexes
with a local coordination similar to that of the uranyl mineral phase meta-autunite. Scanning
transmission electron microscopy with high angle annular dark field analysis showed uranium accumulations
at the cell surface associated with phosphorus containing ligands. Moreover, the effect of
uranium mobile species on the cell viability and metabolic activity was examined by means of flow cytometry techniques, revealing that the cell metabolism is more affected by higher concentrations of
uranium than the cell viability.
The results obtained in this work provide new insights on the interaction of uranium with bentonite
natural yeast from genus Rhodotorula under deep geological repository relevant conditions.