Facilitating New Chromium Reducing Microbes to Enhance Hexavalent Chromium Reduction by In Situ Sonoporation-Mediated Gene Transfer in Soils

Chromium (Cr) is a heavy metal with a high toxicity and pathogenicity. Microbial reduction is an effective strategy to remove Cr­(VI) at contaminated sites but suffers from the low populations and activities of Cr-reducing microorganisms in soils. This study proposed an in situ sonoporation-mediated...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2023-10, Vol.57 (40), p.15123-15133
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Kaichao, Zhang, Wenjing, Liang, Zhentian, Zhao, Hongyu, Chai, Juanfen, Yang, Yuesuo, Teng, Tingting, Zhang, Dayi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Chromium (Cr) is a heavy metal with a high toxicity and pathogenicity. Microbial reduction is an effective strategy to remove Cr­(VI) at contaminated sites but suffers from the low populations and activities of Cr-reducing microorganisms in soils. This study proposed an in situ sonoporation-mediated gene transfer approach, which improved soil Cr­(VI) reduction performance by delivering exogenous Cr-transporter chrA genes and Cr-reducing yieF genes into soil microorganisms with the aid of ultrasound. Besides the increasing populations of Cr-resistant bacteria and elevated copy numbers of chrA and yieF genes after sonoporation-mediated gene transfer, three new Cr-reducing strains were isolated, among which Comamonas aquatica was confirmed to obtain Cr-resistant capability. In addition, sonoporation-mediated gene transfer was the main driving force significantly shaping soil microbial communities owing to the predominance of Cr-resistant microbes. This study pioneered and evidenced that in situ soil sonoporation-mediated gene transfer could effectively deliver functional genes into soil indigenous microbes to facilitate microbial functions for enhanced bioremediation, e.g., Cr-reduction in this study, showing its feasibility as a chemically green and sustainable remediation strategy for heavy metal contaminated sites.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.3c04655