4.7 Article

Arsenic biotransformation genes and As transportation in soil-rice system affected by iron-oxidizing strain (Ochrobactrum sp.)

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 314, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.120311

Keywords

Soil -rice system; Iron oxidizing strain; Ferrous iron oxidation; Arsenic biotransformation gene

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42177392]
  2. Dean's Research Fund 2020/21 of the Education University of Hong Kong [04626]
  3. Key Research and Development Program of Hunan Province of China [2020WK2005]

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In paddy soil, iron-oxidizing bacteria can influence the speciation and accumulation of arsenic in rice. The bacteria can reduce, transport, and potentially oxidize arsenic. The findings also suggest that radial oxygen loss in rhizosphere soils promotes arsenic oxidation.
Arsenic (As) biotransformation in soil affects As biogeochemical cycling and is associated with As accumulation in rice. After inoculation with 1% iron-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) in paddy soil, As speciation, As biotransformation genes in soil, As/Fe in Fe plaques, and As accumulation in rice were characterized. Compared with the control, the available As concentrations in soils decreased while amorphous and poorly crystalline Fe-Al oxidized As and crystalline Fe-Al oxidized As fractions increased of F (FeOB) and RF (rice and FeOB) treatments. Fe concentrations increased and positively correlated with As concentrations in Fe plaques on the rice root surface (***P < 0.001). Compared with R (rice), Monomethyl As (MMA), dimethyl As (DMA), arsenate (As(V)), and arsenite (As(III)) concentrations in rice plants showed a downwards trend of RF treatment. The As concentration in grains was below the National Standard for Food Safety (GB 2762-2017). A total of 16 As biotransformation genes in rhizosphere soils of different treatments (CK, F, R and RF were quantified by high-throughput qPCR (HTqPCR). Compared with the control, the As(V) reduction and As transport genes abundance in other treatments increased respectively by 54.54%-69.17% and 54.63%-73.71%; the As(III) oxidation and As (de) methylation genes did not change significantly; however, several As(III) oxidation genes (aoxA, aoxB, aoxS, and arsH) increased. These results revealed that FeOB could reduce, transport As, and maybe also oxidize As. In addition, As(III) oxidation gene (aoxC) in rhizosphere soil was more abundant than in non-rhizosphere soil. It indicated that radial oxygen loss (ROL) promoted As(III) oxidation in rhizosphere soils. The results provide evidence for As biotransformation by ROL and FeOB in soil-rice system. ROL affects As oxidation and immobilization, and FeOB affects As reduction, transportation and may also affect As oxidation.

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