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1.
Environ Sci Technol ; 49(4): 2328-40, 2015 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25594414

ABSTRACT

The legume-rhizobium symbiosis has been proposed as an important system for phytoremediation of heavy metal contaminated soils due to its beneficial activity of symbiotic nitrogen fixation. However, little is known about metal resistant mechanism of rhizobia and the role of metal resistance determinants in phytoremediation. In this study, copper resistance mechanisms were investigated for a multiple metal resistant plant growth promoting rhizobium, Mesorhizobium amorphae 186. Three categories of determinants involved in copper resistance were identified through transposon mutagenesis, including genes encoding a P-type ATPase (CopA), hypothetical proteins, and other proteins (a GTP-binding protein and a ribosomal protein). Among these determinants, copA played the dominant role in copper homeostasis of M. amorphae 186. Mutagenesis of a hypothetical gene lipA in mutant MlipA exhibited pleiotropic phenotypes including sensitivity to copper, blocked symbiotic capacity and inhibited growth. In addition, the expression of cusB encoding part of an RND-type efflux system was induced by copper. To explore the possible role of copper resistance mechanism in phytoremediation of copper contaminated soil, the symbiotic nodulation and nitrogen fixation abilities were compared using a wild-type strain, a copA-defective mutant, and a lipA-defective mutant. Results showed that a copA deletion did not affect the symbiotic capacity of rhizobia under uncontaminated condition, but the protective role of copA in symbiotic processes at high copper concentration is likely concentration-dependent. In contrast, inoculation of a lipA-defective strain led to significant decreases in the functional nodule numbers, total N content, plant biomass and leghemoglobin expression level of Robinia pseudoacacia even under conditions of uncontaminated soil. Moreover, plants inoculated with lipA-defective strain accumulated much less copper than both the wild-type strain and the copA-defective strain, suggesting an important role of a healthy symbiotic relationship between legume and rhizobia in phytostabilization.


Subject(s)
Copper/pharmacology , Mesorhizobium/drug effects , Robinia/microbiology , Soil Pollutants/pharmacology , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biodegradation, Environmental , Copper/pharmacokinetics , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial/drug effects , Mesorhizobium/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S , Robinia/drug effects , Robinia/metabolism , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Soil Pollutants/pharmacokinetics , Symbiosis , Tissue Distribution
2.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek ; 96(2): 247-58, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19582590

ABSTRACT

Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34 and related strains are adapted to metal contaminated environments. A strong resistance to environmental stressors and adaptation make it ideal strains for survival in decreasing biodiversity conditions and for bioaugmentation purposes in environmental applications. The soil bacterium C. metallidurans is able to grow chemolithoautotrophically on hydrogen and carbon dioxide allowing a strong resilience under conditions lacking organic matter. The biofilm growth on soil particles allows coping with starvation or bad conditions of pH, temperature and pollutants. Its genomic capacity of two megaplasmids encoding several heavy metal resistance operons allowed growth in heavy metal contaminated habitats. In addition its specific siderophores seem to play a role in heavy metal sequestration besides their role in the management of bioavailable iron. Efflux ATPases and RND systems pump the metal cations to the membrane surface where polysaccharides serve as heavy metal binding and nucleation sites for crystallisation of metal carbonates. These polysaccharides contribute also to flotation under specific conditions in a soil-heavy metals-bacteria suspension mixture. An inoculated moving bed sand filter was constructed to treat heavy metal contaminated water and to remove the metals in the form of biomass mixed with metal carbonates. A membrane based contactor allowed to use the bacteria as well in a versatile wastewater treatment system and to grow homogeneously formed heavy metal carbonates. Its behaviour toward heavy metal binding and flotation was combined in a biometal sludge reactor to extract and separate heavy metals from metal contaminated soils. Finally its metal-induced heavy metal resistance allowed constructing whole cell heavy metal biosensors which, after contact with contaminated soil, waste, solids, minerals and ashes, were induced in function of the bioavailable concentration (Cd, Zn, Cu, Cr, Co, Ni, Tl, Pb and Hg) in the solids and allowed to investigate the speciation of immobilization of those metals.


Subject(s)
Cupriavidus/metabolism , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Industrial Microbiology/methods , Metals, Heavy/metabolism , Soil Pollutants/metabolism , Water Pollutants/metabolism , Anaerobiosis , Biodegradation, Environmental , Bioreactors , Biosensing Techniques , Cupriavidus/drug effects , Cupriavidus/genetics , Cupriavidus/growth & development , Environmental Microbiology , Metals, Heavy/pharmacology
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