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Highly efficient immobilization of environmental uranium contamination with Pseudomonas stutzeri by biosorption, biomineralization, and bioreduction.

Authors :
Yu, Qiuhan
Yuan, Yihui
Feng, Lijuan
Sun, Wenyan
Lin, Ke
Zhang, Jiacheng
Zhang, Yibin
Wang, Hui
Wang, Ning
Peng, Qin
Source :
Journal of Hazardous Materials. Feb2022:Part D, Vol. 424, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Uranium is a heavy metal with both chemotoxicity and radiotoxicity. Due to the increasing consumption of uranium, the remediation of uranium contamination and recovery of uranium from non-conventional approach is highly needed. Microorganism exhibits high potential for immobilization of uranium. This study for the first time isolated a marine Pseudomonas stutzeri strain MRU-UE1 with high uranium immobilization capacity of 308.72 mg/g, which is attributed to the synergetic mechanisms of biosorption, biomineralization, and bioreduction. The uranium is found to be immobilized in forms of tetragonal chernikovite (H 2 (UO 2) 2 (PO 4) 2 ·8H 2 O) by biomineralization and CaU(PO 4) 2 by bioreduction under aerobic environment, which is rarely observed and would broaden the application of this strain in aerobic condition. The protein, phosphate group, and carboxyl group are found to be essential for the biosorption of uranium. In response to the stress of uranium, the strain produces inorganic phosphate group, which transformed soluble uranyl ion to insoluble uranium-containing precipitates, and poly-β-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), which is observed for the first time during the interaction between microorganism and uranium. In summary, P. stutzeri strain MRU-UE1 would be a promising alternative for environmental uranium contamination remediation and uranium extraction from seawater. [Display omitted] • Pseudomonas stutzeri strain is used for uranium accumulation for the first time. • P. stutzeri strain MRU-UE1 exhibits uranium immobilization capacity of 308.72 mg/g. • Synergy of biosorption, biomineralization, and bioreduction is observed. • Bioreduction of uranium by bacteria happens under aerobic environment. • Production of PHB is observed for the first time to resist the toxicity of uranium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043894
Volume :
424
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Hazardous Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154011286
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127758