Interplay between arsenic and selenium biomineralization in Shewanella sp. O23S
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Shewanella Arsenic Selenium Biominerals Environmental pollution
Date
2022-05-12Referencia bibliográfica
Lucian C. Staicu... [et al.]. Interplay between arsenic and selenium biomineralization in Shewanella sp. O23S, Environmental Pollution, Volume 306, 2022, 119451, ISSN 0269-7491, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119451]
Sponsorship
National Science Centre, Poland 2017/26/D/NZ1/00408; Plan de Recuperacion, Transformacion y Resiliencia, through Universidad de Oviedo MU-21-UP2021-030 32892642; Spanish Government European Commission RTI2018-099565-B-I00 PCI2019-111927-2; Junta de Andalucia RNM-179; University of Granada UCE-PP2016-05; National Research, Development & Innovation Office (NRDIO) - Hungary NKFIH-471-3/202 European UnionNextGeneration EU, Ministerio de UniversidadesAbstract
Bacteria play crucial roles in the biogeochemical cycle of arsenic (As) and selenium (Se) as these elements are metabolized via detoxification, energy generation (anaerobic respiration) and biosynthesis (e.g. selenocysteine) strategies. To date, arsenic and selenium biomineralization in bacteria were studied separately. In this study, the anaerobic metabolism of As and Se in Shewanella sp. O23S was investigated separately and mixed, with an emphasis put on the biomineralization products of this process. Multiple analytical techniques including ICP-MS, TEM-EDS, XRD, Micro-Raman, spectmphotometry and surface charge (zeta potential) were employed. Shewanella sp. O23S is capable of reducing selenate (SeO42-) and selenite (SeO32-) to red Se(-S)(0), and arsenate (AsO43-) to arsenite (AsO33-). The release of H2S from cysteine led to the precipitation of AsS minerals: nanorod AsS and granular As2S3. When As and Se oxyanions were mixed, both As-S and Se(-S)(0) biominerals were synthesized. All biominerals were extracellular, amorphous and presented a negative surface charge (-24 to -38 mV). Kinetic analysis indicated the following reduction yields: SeO32- (90%), AsO43- (60%), and SeO42- (<10%). The mix of SeO32- with AsO43- led to a decrease in As removal to 30%, while Se reduction yield was unaffected (88%). Interestingly, SeO42- incubated with AsO43- boosted the Se removal (71%). The exclusive extracellular formation of As and Se biominerals might indicate an extracellular respiratory process characteristic of various Shewanella species and strains. This is the first study documenting a complex interplay between As and Se oxyanions: selenite decreased arsenate reduction, whereas arsenate stimulated selenate reduction. Further investigation needs to clarify whether Shewanella sp. O23S employs multi-substrate respiratory enzymes or separate, high affinity enzymes for As and Se oxyanion respiration.