4.8 Article

Removal of arsenic from contaminated soils by microbial reduction of arsenate and quinone

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 16, Pages 6154-6159

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es703146f

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We investigated bioremediation of As-contaminated soils by reductive dissolution of As using a dissimilatory As(V)-reducing bacterium (DARB), Bacillus selenatarsenatis SF-1. We also examined the effect of anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), an extracellular electron-shuttling quinone, on the As extraction. When B. selenatarsenatis was incubated with As(V)-laden Al precipitates, no acceleration of As dissolution was observed in the presence of AQDS, even though the microbial reduction of AQDS occurred actively. In contrast, AQDS addition significantly enhanced the reductive dissolution of As and Fe in analogous experiments with As(V)-laden Fe(III) precipitates, whereas As dissolution did not occur in the absence of the As(V) reducer. These results indicate the dissolution of As was accelerated by indirect reduction of solid-phase Fe(III) following microbial AQDS reduction, although As(V) reduction is vital for As extraction. B. selenatarsenatis was able to extract As from two types of industrially contaminated soils through reduction of solid-phase As(V) and Fe(III). The copresence of AQDS with B. selenatarsenatis improved the removal efficiency of As from the contaminated soils, concomitantly releasing Fe(II), suggesting that simultaneous use of DARB and electron-shuttling compounds can be an effective strategy for remediation of As-contaminated soils.

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