Affiliation:
1. Department of Biotechnology, Abiko Research Laboratory, Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry, 1646 Abiko, Abiko-shi, Chiba 270-11, Japan
Abstract
Bacterial adhesion to mineral surfaces plays an important role not only in bacterial survival in natural ecosystems, but also in mining industry applications. Selective adhesion was investigated with
Thiobacillus ferrooxidans
by using four minerals, pyrite, quartz, chalcopyrite, and galena.
Escherichia coli
was used as a control bacterium. Contact angles were used as indicators of hydrophobicity, which was an important factor in the interaction between minerals and bacteria. The contact angle of
E. coli
in a 0.5% sodium chloride solution was 31°, and the contact angle of
T. ferrooxidans
in a pH 2.0 sulfuric acid solution was 23°.
E. coli
tended to adhere to more hydrophobic minerals by hydrophobic interaction, while
T. ferrooxidans
selectively adhered to iron-containing minerals, such as pyrite and chalcopyrite. Ferrous ion inhibited the selective adhesion of
T. ferrooxidans
to pyrite competitively, while ferric ion scarcely inhibited such adhesion. When selective adhesion was quenched by ferrous ion completely, adhesion of
T. ferrooxidans
was controlled by hydrophilic interactions. Adhesion of
E. coli
to pyrite exhibited a liner relationship on langmuir isotherm plots, but adhesion of
T. ferrooxidans
did not.
T. ferrooxidans
recognized the reduced iron in minerals and selectively adhered to pyrite and chalcopyrite by a strong interaction other than the physical interaction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
123 articles.
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