Highly selective preconcentration of ultra-trace cadmium by yeast surface engineering.

Analyst

Research Center for Analytical Sciences, College of Sciences, Northeastern University, Shenyang, China.

Published: September 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study utilized surface-engineered yeast cells (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) to improve cadmium absorption by enhancing the interaction between the cells and the heavy metal, resulting in significant increases in metal tolerance and ionic strength.
  • - The engineered yeast cells were immobilized on cytopore(®) microcarrier beads, enabling a new method for selective cadmium preconcentration, which was detected using graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS) in a lab-on-valve system.
  • - The method achieved impressive results, including a 30-fold enrichment factor, a detection limit of 1.1 ng L(-1), and effective validation through testing against certified reference materials and environmental water samples.

Article Abstract

The potential of selective cell-sorption for separation/preconcentration of ultra-trace heavy metals was exploited by surface engineering of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. The general idea is to display the cadmium-binding peptide on the cell surface in order to enhance the covalent interaction between cadmium and the yeast cells. By immobilizing the surface-engineered yeast cells onto cytopore(®) microcarrier beads for cadmium adsorption, we demonstrated that with respect to the native yeast 600-fold and 25-1000-fold improvements were observed respectively for the tolerance of ionic strength and the tolerant capability toward various metal cations after surface engineering. Based on these observations, a novel procedure for selective cadmium preconcentration was developed with detection by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS), employing the engineered S. cerevisiae cell-loaded cytopore(®) beads as a renewable sorption medium incorporated into a sequential injection lab-on-valve system. The cadmium retained on the yeast cell surface was eluted with a small amount of nitric acid and quantified with GFAAS. Within a range of 5-100 ng L(-1) and a sample volume of 1 mL, an enrichment factor of 30 was achieved along with a detection limit of 1.1 ng L(-1), a sampling frequency of 20 h(-1) and a precision of 3.3% RSD at 50 ng L(-1). The procedure was validated by analyzing cadmium in certified reference materials and a series of environmental water samples.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c2an35755kDOI Listing

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