Premium
Isolation and characterization of a chromium‐reducing bacterium from a chromated copper arsenate‐contaminated site
Author(s) -
McLean Jeff S.,
Beveridge Terry J.,
Phipps David
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1046/j.1462-2920.2000.00143.x
Subject(s) - chromium , chromate conversion coating , hexavalent chromium , biosorption , bioremediation , arsenate , nuclear chemistry , biology , environmental chemistry , arsenic , materials science , chemistry , adsorption , contamination , metallurgy , ecology , sorption , organic chemistry
A Gram‐negative bacterium (CRB5) was isolated from a chromium‐contaminated site that was capable of reducing hexavalent chromium to an insoluble precipitate, thereby removing this toxic chromium species from solution. Analysis of the 16S rRNA from the isolate revealed that it was a pseudomonad with high similarity to Pseudomaonas synxantha . CRB5 was tolerant to high concentrations of chromate (500 mg l −1 ) and can reduce Cr(VI) under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. It also exhibited a broad range of reduction efficiencies under minimal nutrient conditions at temperatures between 4°C and 37°C and at pH levels from 4 to 9. As reduction increased, so did total cellular protein, indicating that cell growth was a requirement for reduction. Under low nutrient conditions with CRB5 or when using non‐sterile contaminated groundwater from the site, reduction of Cr(VI) was followed by a increase in solution turbidity as a result of the formation of fine‐grained Cr(III) precipitates, most probably chromium hydroxide mineral phases such as Cr(OH) 3 . Chromium adsorption and precipitation, as observed by transmission electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X‐ray spectroscopy (TEM/EDS), revealed that the surfaces of the cells were uniformly stained with bound Cr(III) and amorphous precipitates (as determined by selected area electron diffraction; SAED). A mass balance of chromium in a batch bioreactor revealed that up to 30% of the total Cr was as settable precipitates or bound to cells.