
Implicating the Glutathione-Gated Potassium Efflux System as a Cause of Electrophile-Induced Activated Sludge Deflocculation
Author(s) -
Charles Bott,
Nancy G. Love
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
applied and environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 324
eISSN - 1070-6291
pISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.1128/aem.70.9.5569-5578.2004
Subject(s) - efflux , glutathione , electrophile , potassium , chemistry , activated sludge , biochemistry , biophysics , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , wastewater , environmental science , enzyme , environmental engineering , catalysis , organic chemistry
The glutathione-gated K(+) efflux (GGKE) system represents a protective microbial stress response that is activated by electrophilic or thiol-reactive stressors. It was hypothesized that efflux of cytoplasmic K(+) occurs in activated sludge communities in response to shock loads of industrially relevant electrophilic chemicals and results in significant deflocculation. Novosphingobium capsulatum, a bacterium consistent with others found in activated sludge treatment systems, responded to electrophilic thiol reactants with rapid efflux of up to 80% of its cytoplasmic K(+) pool. Furthermore, N. capsulatum and activated sludge cultures exhibited dynamic efflux-uptake-efflux responses very similar to those observed by others in Escherichia coli K-12 exposed to the electrophilic stressors N-ethylmaleimide and 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and the reducing agent dithiothreitol. Fluorescent LIVE/DEAD stains were used to show that cell lysis was not the cause of electrophile-induced K(+) efflux. Nigericin was used to artificially stimulate K(+) efflux from N. capsulatum and activated sludge cultures as a comparison to electrophile-induced K(+) efflux and showed that cytoplasmic K(+) efflux by both means corresponded with activated sludge deflocculation. These results parallel those of previous studies with pure cultures in which GGKE was shown to cause cytoplasmic K(+) efflux and implicate the GGKE system as a probable causal mechanism for electrophile-induced, activated sludge deflocculation. Calculations support the notion that shock loads of electrophilic chemicals result in very high K(+) concentrations within the activated sludge floc structure, and these K(+) levels are comparable to that which caused deflocculation by external (nonphysiological) KCl addition.