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Reduction of Hg(II) to Hg(0) by Biogenic Magnetite from two Magnetotactic Bacteria

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Version 2 2017-12-29, 12:28
Version 1 2017-10-24, 16:14
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-29, 12:28 authored by Songnian Liu, Heather A. Wiatrowski

Understanding the biogeochemical cycle of the highly toxic element mercury (Hg) is necessary to predict its fate and transport. In this study, we determined that biogenic magnetite isolated from Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense MSR-1 and Magnetospirillum magnetotacticum MS-1 was capable of reducing inorganic mercury [Hg(II)] to elemental mercury [Hg(0)]. These two magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) lacked mercuric resistance operons in the genomes. However, they revealed high resistance to Hg(II) under atmospheric conditions and an even higher resistance under microaerobic conditions (1% O2 and 99% N2). Neither strain reduced Hg(II) to Hg(0) under atmospheric conditions. However, a slow rate (0.05–0.21 µM·d−1) of Hg(II) loss occurred from late log phase to stationary phase in two MTBs' culture media under microaerobic conditions. Increased Hg(II) entered both cells under microaerobic conditions relative to atmospheric conditions. The majority of Hg(II) was still blocked by the cell membrane. Hg(II) reduction was more effective when biogenic magnetite was extracted out, with or without the magnetosome membrane envelope. When magnetosome membrane was present, 8.55–13.53% of 250 nM Hg(II) was reduced to Hg(0) by 250 mg/L biogenic magnetite suspension within 2 hours. This ratio increased to 55.07–64.70% while magnetosome membrane was removed. We concluded that two MTBs contributed to the reduction of Hg(II) to Hg(0) at a slow rate in vivo. Such reduction was more favorable to occur when biogenic magnetite is released from dead cells. It proposed a new biotic pathway for the formation of Hg(0) in aquatic systems.

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