Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser

Background: Arsenic is toxic to most living cells. The two soluble inorganic forms of arsenic are arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5), with arsenite the more toxic. Prokaryotic metabolism of arsenic has been reported in both thermal and moderate environments and has been shown to be involved in the redo...

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Main Authors: Osborne, TH, Jamieson, HE, Hudson-Edwards, KA, Nordstrom, DK, Walker, SR, Ward, SA, Santini, JM
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/1/1471-2180-10-205.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1416492 2023-12-24T10:14:36+01:00 Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser Osborne, TH Jamieson, HE Hudson-Edwards, KA Nordstrom, DK Walker, SR Ward, SA Santini, JM 2010-07-30 application/pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/1/1471-2180-10-205.pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/ eng eng https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/1/1471-2180-10-205.pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/ open BMC Microbiology , 10 , Article 205. (2010) Article 2010 ftucl 2023-11-27T13:07:26Z Background: Arsenic is toxic to most living cells. The two soluble inorganic forms of arsenic are arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5), with arsenite the more toxic. Prokaryotic metabolism of arsenic has been reported in both thermal and moderate environments and has been shown to be involved in the redox cycling of arsenic. No arsenic metabolism (either dissimilatory arsenate reduction or arsenite oxidation) has ever been reported in cold environments (i.e. < 10°C). Results: Our study site is located 512 kilometres south of the Arctic Circle in the Northwest Territories, Canada in an inactive gold mine which contains mine waste water in excess of 50 mM arsenic. Several thousand tonnes of arsenic trioxide dust are stored in underground chambers and microbial biofilms grow on the chamber walls below seepage points rich in arsenite-containing solutions. We compared the arsenite oxidisers in two subsamples (which differed in arsenite concentration) collected from one biofilm. 'Species' (sequence) richness did not differ between subsamples, but the relative importance of the three identifiable clades did. An arsenite-oxidising bacterium (designated GM1) was isolated, and was shown to oxidise arsenite in the early exponential growth phase and to grow at a broad range of temperatures (4-25°C). Its arsenite oxidase was constitutively expressed and functioned over a broad temperature range. Conclusions: The diversity of arsenite oxidisers does not significantly differ from two subsamples of a microbial biofilm that vary in arsenite concentrations. GM1 is the first psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser to be isolated with the ability to grow below 10°C. This ability to grow at low temperatures could be harnessed for arsenic bioremediation in moderate to cold climates. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Northwest Territories Subarctic University College London: UCL Discovery Arctic Canada Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language English
description Background: Arsenic is toxic to most living cells. The two soluble inorganic forms of arsenic are arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5), with arsenite the more toxic. Prokaryotic metabolism of arsenic has been reported in both thermal and moderate environments and has been shown to be involved in the redox cycling of arsenic. No arsenic metabolism (either dissimilatory arsenate reduction or arsenite oxidation) has ever been reported in cold environments (i.e. < 10°C). Results: Our study site is located 512 kilometres south of the Arctic Circle in the Northwest Territories, Canada in an inactive gold mine which contains mine waste water in excess of 50 mM arsenic. Several thousand tonnes of arsenic trioxide dust are stored in underground chambers and microbial biofilms grow on the chamber walls below seepage points rich in arsenite-containing solutions. We compared the arsenite oxidisers in two subsamples (which differed in arsenite concentration) collected from one biofilm. 'Species' (sequence) richness did not differ between subsamples, but the relative importance of the three identifiable clades did. An arsenite-oxidising bacterium (designated GM1) was isolated, and was shown to oxidise arsenite in the early exponential growth phase and to grow at a broad range of temperatures (4-25°C). Its arsenite oxidase was constitutively expressed and functioned over a broad temperature range. Conclusions: The diversity of arsenite oxidisers does not significantly differ from two subsamples of a microbial biofilm that vary in arsenite concentrations. GM1 is the first psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser to be isolated with the ability to grow below 10°C. This ability to grow at low temperatures could be harnessed for arsenic bioremediation in moderate to cold climates.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Osborne, TH
Jamieson, HE
Hudson-Edwards, KA
Nordstrom, DK
Walker, SR
Ward, SA
Santini, JM
spellingShingle Osborne, TH
Jamieson, HE
Hudson-Edwards, KA
Nordstrom, DK
Walker, SR
Ward, SA
Santini, JM
Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
author_facet Osborne, TH
Jamieson, HE
Hudson-Edwards, KA
Nordstrom, DK
Walker, SR
Ward, SA
Santini, JM
author_sort Osborne, TH
title Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
title_short Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
title_full Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
title_fullStr Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
title_full_unstemmed Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
title_sort microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
publishDate 2010
url https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/1/1471-2180-10-205.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/
geographic Arctic
Canada
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Northwest Territories
genre Arctic
Northwest Territories
Subarctic
genre_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
Subarctic
op_source BMC Microbiology , 10 , Article 205. (2010)
op_relation https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/1/1471-2180-10-205.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1416492/
op_rights open
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