Novel Photoelectron-Assisted Microbial Reduction of Arsenate Driven by Photosensitive Dissolved Organic Matter in Mine Stream Sediments

The microbial reduction of arsenate (As­(V)) significantly contributes to arsenic migration in mine stream sediment, primarily driven by heterotrophic microorganisms using dissolved organic matter (DOM) as a carbon source. This study reveals a novel reduction pathway in sediments that photosensitive...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2024-12, Vol.58 (50), p.22170-22182
Hauptverfasser: Guo, Zhaohui, Cao, Jie, Xu, Rui, Zhang, Honglin, He, Lele, Gao, Hanbing, Zhu, Linao, Jia, Meiying, Yang, Zhaohui, Xiong, Weiping
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container_end_page 22182
container_issue 50
container_start_page 22170
container_title Environmental science & technology
container_volume 58
creator Guo, Zhaohui
Cao, Jie
Xu, Rui
Zhang, Honglin
He, Lele
Gao, Hanbing
Zhu, Linao
Jia, Meiying
Yang, Zhaohui
Xiong, Weiping
description The microbial reduction of arsenate (As­(V)) significantly contributes to arsenic migration in mine stream sediment, primarily driven by heterotrophic microorganisms using dissolved organic matter (DOM) as a carbon source. This study reveals a novel reduction pathway in sediments that photosensitive DOM generates photoelectrons to stimulate diverse nonphototrophic microorganisms to reduce As­(V). This microbial photoelectrophic As­(V) reduction (PEAsR) was investigated using microcosm incubation, which showed the transfer of photoelectrons from DOM to indigenous sediment microorganisms, thereby leading to a 50% higher microbial reduction rate of As­(V). The abundance of two marker genes for As­(V) reduction, arrA and arsC, increased substantially, confirming the microbial nature of PEAsR rather than a photoelectrochemical process. Photoelectron ion is unlikely to stimulate photolithoautotrophic growth. Instead, diverse nonphototrophic genera, e.g., Cupriavidus, Sphingopyxis, Mycobacterium, and Bradyrhizobium, spanning 13 orders became enriched by 10–50 folds. Metagenomic binning revealed their genetic potential to mediate the photoelectron-assisted reduction of As­(V). These microorganisms contain essential genes involved in respiratory As­(V) reduction, detoxification As­(V) reduction, dimethyl sulfoxide reductase family, c-type cytochromes, and multiple heavy-metal resistance but lack a complete photosynthesis system. The novel microbial PEAsR pathway offers new insights into the interaction between photoelectron utilization and nonphototrophic As­(V)-reducing microorganisms, which may have profound implications for arsenic pollution transportation in mine stream sediment.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.est.4c09647
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subjects Arsenates - metabolism
Biogeochemical Cycling
Geologic Sediments - chemistry
Geologic Sediments - microbiology
Mining
Rivers - chemistry
title Novel Photoelectron-Assisted Microbial Reduction of Arsenate Driven by Photosensitive Dissolved Organic Matter in Mine Stream Sediments
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