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Impact of bacterial motility on biosorption and cometabolism of pyrene in a porous medium

Authors :
Joaquim Vila
Ludovica Rolando
Jose Carlos Castilla-Alcantara
José-Julio Ortega-Calvo
Rosa Posada Baquero
Anna Barra Caracciolo
Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (España)
Junta de Andalucía
European Commission
Generalitat de Catalunya
Vila, Joaquim
Posada Baquero, Rosa
Castilla-Alcántara, J. C.
Barra Caracciolo, Anna
Ortega Calvo, J. J.
Vila, Joaquim [0000-0003-2212-2474]
Posada Baquero, Rosa [0000-0003-2726-7357]
Castilla-Alcántara, J. C. [0000-0002-9123-1052]
Barra Caracciolo, Anna [0000-0002-4986-5641]
Ortega Calvo, J. J. [0000-0003-1672-5199]
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

8 páginas.- 6 figuras.- 40 referencias<br />The risks of pollution by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) may increase in bioremediated soils as a result of the formation of toxic byproducts and the mobilization of pollutants associated to suspended colloids. In this study, we used the motile and chemotactic bacterium Pseudomonas putida G7 as an experimental model for examining the potential role of bacterial motility in the cometabolism and biosorption of pyrene in a porous medium. For this purpose, we conducted batch and column transport experiments with 14C-labelled pyrene loaded on silicone O-rings, which acted as a passive dosing system. In the batch experiments, we observed concentrations of the 14C-pyrene equivalents well above the equilibrium concentration observed in abiotic controls. This mobilization was attributed to biosorption and cometabolism processes occurring in parallel. HPLC quantification revealed pyrene concentrations well below the 14C-based quantifications by liquid scintillation, indicating pyrene transformation into water-soluble polar metabolites. The results from transport experiments in sand columns revealed that cometabolic-active, motile cells were capable of accessing a distant source of sorbed pyrene. Using the same experimental system, we also determined that salicylate-mobilized cells, inhibited for pyrene cometabolism, but mobilized due to their tactic behavior, were able to sorb the compound and mobilize it by biosorption. Our results indicate that motile bacteria active in bioremediation may contribute, through cometabolism and biosorption, to the risk associated to pollutant mobilization in soils. This research could be the starting point for the development of more efficient, low-risk bioremediation strategies of poorly bioavailable contaminants in soils. © 2020 Elsevier B.V.<br />We thank the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (CGL2016-77497-R), the Andalusian Government (RNM 2337), and the European Commission (LIFE15 ENV/IT/000396). Joaquim Vila is a Serra Húnter Fellow (Generalitat de Catalunya).

Details

ISSN :
18791026
Volume :
717
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Science of the total environment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dada7e00418d835985ca829b7cf7dd06