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Structural and spectral features of selenium nanospheres produced by Se-respiring bacteria
- Source :
- Applied and environmental microbiology. 70(1)
- Publication Year :
- 2004
-
Abstract
- Certain anaerobic bacteria respire toxic selenium oxyanions and in doing so produce extracellular accumulations of elemental selenium [Se(0)]. We examined three physiologically and phylogenetically diverse species of selenate- and selenite-respiring bacteria,Sulfurospirillum barnesii,Bacillus selenitireducens, andSelenihalanaerobacter shriftii, for the occurrence of this phenomenon. When grown with selenium oxyanions as the electron acceptor, all of these organisms formed extracellular granules consisting of stable, uniform nanospheres (diameter, ∼300 nm) of Se(0) having monoclinic crystalline structures. Intracellular packets of Se(0) were also noted. The number of intracellular Se(0) packets could be reduced by first growing cells with nitrate as the electron acceptor and then adding selenite ions to washed suspensions of the nitrate-grown cells. This resulted in the formation of primarily extracellular Se nanospheres. After harvesting and cleansing of cellular debris, we observed large differences in the optical properties (UV-visible absorption and Raman spectra) of purified extracellular nanospheres produced in this manner by the three different bacterial species. The spectral properties in turn differed substantially from those of amorphous Se(0) formed by chemical oxidation of H2Se and of black, vitreous Se(0) formed chemically by reduction of selenite with ascorbate. The microbial synthesis of Se(0) nanospheres results in unique, complex, compacted nanostructural arrangements of Se atoms. These arrangements probably reflect a diversity of enzymes involved in the dissimilatory reduction that are subtly different in different microbes. Remarkably, these conditions cannot be achieved by current methods of chemical synthesis.
- Subjects :
- Inorganic chemistry
Microbial metabolism
chemistry.chemical_element
Bacillus
Cytoplasmic Granules
Spectrum Analysis, Raman
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Selenate
chemistry.chemical_compound
Selenium
Extracellular
Anaerobiosis
chemistry.chemical_classification
Ecology
biology
Bacteria
Thauera selenatis
Electron acceptor
biology.organism_classification
Geomicrobiology
Culture Media
chemistry
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Epsilonproteobacteria
Anaerobic bacteria
Food Science
Biotechnology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00992240
- Volume :
- 70
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Applied and environmental microbiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0ce62a19d7df1ab6d3b540e0ac292556