Affiliation:
1. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington 99352
2. Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 3230-4470
3. Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814-4799
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Sediments from a high-level nuclear waste plume were collected as part of investigations to evaluate the potential fate and migration of contaminants in the subsurface. The plume originated from a leak that occurred in 1962 from a waste tank consisting of high concentrations of alkali, nitrate, aluminate, Cr(VI),
137
Cs, and
99
Tc. Investigations were initiated to determine the distribution of viable microorganisms in the vadose sediment samples, probe the phylogeny of cultivated and uncultivated members, and evaluate the ability of the cultivated organisms to survive acute doses of ionizing radiation. The populations of viable aerobic heterotrophic bacteria were generally low, from below detection to ∼10
4
CFU g
−1
, but viable microorganisms were recovered from 11 of 16 samples, including several of the most radioactive ones (e.g., >10 μCi of
137
Cs/g). The isolates from the contaminated sediments and clone libraries from sediment DNA extracts were dominated by members related to known gram-positive bacteria. Gram-positive bacteria most closely related to
Arthrobacter
species were the most common isolates among all samples, but other phyla high in G+C content were also represented, including
Rhodococcus
and
Nocardia
. Two isolates from the second-most radioactive sample (>20 μCi of
137
Cs g
−1
) were closely related to
Deinococcus radiodurans
and were able to survive acute doses of ionizing radiation approaching 20 kGy. Many of the gram-positive isolates were resistant to lower levels of gamma radiation. These results demonstrate that gram-positive bacteria, predominantly from phyla high in G+C content, are indigenous to Hanford vadose sediments and that some are effective at surviving the extreme physical and chemical stress associated with radioactive waste.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
226 articles.
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