Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Vanadium can be an important contaminant in groundwaters impacted by mining activities. In order to determine if microorganisms of the
Geobacteraceae
, the predominant dissimilatory metal reducers in many subsurface environments, were capable of reducing vanadium(V),
Geobacter metallireducens
was inoculated into a medium in which acetate was the electron donor and vanadium(V) was the sole electron acceptor. Reduction of vanadium(V) resulted in the production of vanadium(IV), which subsequently precipitated. Reduction of vanadium(V) was associated with cell growth with a generation time of 15 h. No vanadium(V) was reduced and no precipitate was formed in heat-killed or abiotic controls. Acetate was the most effective of all the electron donors evaluated. When acetate was injected into the subsurface to enhance the growth and activity of
Geobacteraceae
in an aquifer contaminated with uranium and vanadium, vanadium was removed from the groundwater even more effectively than uranium. These studies demonstrate that
G. metallireducens
can grow via vanadium(V) respiration and that stimulating the activity of
Geobacteraceae
, and hence vanadium(V) reduction, can be an effective strategy for in situ immobilization of vanadium in contaminated subsurface environments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
203 articles.
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