Enterobacter cloacae SLD1a-1 is capable of the complete reduction of selenate to selenium and the initial reaction is catalysed by a membrane-bound selenate reductase. In the present study, continuous culture experiments were employed to investigate the possibility that selenate reduction, via the selenate reductase, might provide sufficient energy to maintain cell viability when deprived of the preferred anaerobic terminal electron acceptor nitrate. The evidence presented indicates that the selenate reductase supports slow growth that retards the wash-out of the culture when switching to nitrate-depleted selenate-rich medium, and provides a proton motive force for sustained cell maintenance. In contrast, a strain of E. cloacae (sub sp. cloacae) that does not readily reduce selenate, cannot sustain cell maintenance when switching to a selenate-rich medium. This work demonstrates for the first time that respiratory linked selenate reduction gives E. cloacae SLD1a-1 a selective advantage when inhabiting selenate-contaminated environments and highlights the suitability of utilising E. cloacae SLD1a-1 when developing selenium remediation strategies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10295-008-0359-0 | DOI Listing |
Environ Microbiol
January 2009
Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.
In this study, we investigated the role of menaquinone biosynthesis genes in selenate reduction by Enterobacter cloacae SLD1a-1 and Escherichia coli K12. A mini-Tn5 transposon mutant of E. cloacae SLD1a-1, designated as 4E6, was isolated that had lost the ability to reduce Se(VI) to Se(0).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Appl Microbiol
July 2008
Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901, USA.
J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol
August 2008
Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences, University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4HH, UK.
Enterobacter cloacae SLD1a-1 is capable of the complete reduction of selenate to selenium and the initial reaction is catalysed by a membrane-bound selenate reductase. In the present study, continuous culture experiments were employed to investigate the possibility that selenate reduction, via the selenate reductase, might provide sufficient energy to maintain cell viability when deprived of the preferred anaerobic terminal electron acceptor nitrate. The evidence presented indicates that the selenate reductase supports slow growth that retards the wash-out of the culture when switching to nitrate-depleted selenate-rich medium, and provides a proton motive force for sustained cell maintenance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
November 2007
Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901, USA.
Microbial processes play an important role in the redox transformations of toxic selenium oxyanions. In this study, we employed chemical kinetic and molecular genetic techniques to investigate the mechanisms of Se(IV) and Se-(VI) reduction by the facultative anaerobe Enterobacter cloacae SLD1a-1. The rates of microbial selenium oxyanion reduction were measured as a function of initial selenium oxyanion concentration (0-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Environ Microbiol
March 2007
Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University, 14 College Farm Rd., New Brunswick, NJ 07102, USA.
The fate of selenium in the environment is controlled, in part, by microbial selenium oxyanion reduction and Se(0) precipitation. In this study, we identified a genetic regulator that controls selenate reductase activity in the Se-reducing bacterium Enterobacter cloacae SLD1a-1. Heterologous expression of the global anaerobic regulatory gene fnr (fumarate nitrate reduction regulator) from E.
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