A
Fungal-Mediated Cryptic Selenium Cycle Linked to
Manganese Biogeochemistry
Posted on 2020-03-05 - 13:34
Selenium (Se) redox chemistry is
a determining factor for its environmental
toxicity and mobility. Currently, millions of people are impacted
by Se deficiency or toxicity, and in geologic history, several mass
extinctions have been linked to extreme Se deficiency. Importantly,
microbial activity and interactions with other biogeochemically active
elements can drastically alter Se oxidation state and form, impacting
its bioavailability. Here, we use wet geochemistry, spectroscopy,
and electron microscopy to identify a cryptic, or hidden, Se cycle
involving the reoxidation of biogenic volatile Se compounds in the
presence of biogenic manganese [Mn(III, IV)] oxides and oxyhydroxides
(hereafter referred to as “Mn oxides”). Using two common
environmental Ascomycete fungi, Paraconiothyrium sporulosum and Stagonospora sp., we observed
that aerobic Se(IV and VI) bioreduction to Se(0) and Se(-II) occurs
simultaneously alongside the opposite redox biomineralization process
of mycogenic Mn(II) oxidation to Mn oxides. Selenium bioreduction
produced stable Se(0) nanoparticles and organoselenium compounds.
However, mycogenic Mn oxides rapidly oxidized volatile Se products,
recycling these compounds back to soluble forms. Given their abundance
in natural systems, biogenic Mn oxides likely play an important role
mediating Se biogeochemistry. Elucidating this cryptic Se cycle is
essential for understanding and predicting Se behavior in diverse
environmental systems.
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Rosenfeld, Carla E.; Sabuda, Mary C.; Hinkle, Margaret A.G.; James, Bruce R.; Santelli, Cara M. (2020). A
Fungal-Mediated Cryptic Selenium Cycle Linked to
Manganese Biogeochemistry. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b06022