In vitro biosynthesis of Ag, Au and Te-containing nanostructures by Exiguobacterium cell-free extracts.

BMC Biotechnol

Laboratorio Microbiología Molecular, Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Química y Biología, Universidad de Santiago de Chile, Santiago, Chile.

Published: May 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The genus Exiguobacterium contains bacteria that thrive in extreme environments and can reduce toxic metal(loid)s, potentially transforming them into less harmful forms through bioremediation.
  • - Research focused on three Exiguobacterium species revealed their enhanced ability to tolerate and reduce silver, gold, and tellurium compounds, especially in anaerobic conditions, leading to the synthesis of nanoscale structures.
  • - The produced nanostructures exhibited varying sizes and shapes, suggesting these bacteria could be valuable for eco-friendly nanomaterial production with possible biotechnological applications.

Article Abstract

Background: The bacterial genus Exiguobacterium includes several species that inhabit environments with a wide range of temperature, salinity, and pH. This is why the microorganisms from this genus are known generically as polyextremophiles. Several environmental isolates have been explored and characterized for enzyme production as well as for bioremediation purposes. In this line, toxic metal(loid) reduction by these microorganisms represents an approach to decontaminate soluble metal ions via their transformation into less toxic, insoluble derivatives. Microbial-mediated metal(loid) reduction frequently results in the synthesis of nanoscale structures-nanostructures (NS) -. Thus, microorganisms could be used as an ecofriendly way to get NS.

Results: We analyzed the tolerance of Exiguobacterium acetylicum MF03, E. aurantiacum MF06, and E. profundum MF08 to Silver (I), gold (III), and tellurium (IV) compounds. Specifically, we explored the ability of cell-free extracts from these bacteria to reduce these toxicants and synthesize NS in vitro, both in the presence or absence of oxygen. All isolates exhibited higher tolerance to these toxicants in anaerobiosis. While in the absence of oxygen they showed high tellurite- and silver-reducing activity at pH 9.0, whereas AuCl which was reduced at pH 7.0 in both conditions. Given these results, cell-free extracts were used to synthesize NS containing silver, gold or tellurium, characterizing their size, morphology and chemical composition. Silver and tellurium NS exhibited smaller size under anaerobiosis and their morphology was circular (silver NS), starred (tellurium NS) or amorphous (gold NS).

Conclusions: This nanostructure-synthesizing ability makes these isolates interesting candidates to get NS with biotechnological potential.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7260758PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12896-020-00625-yDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cell-free extracts
12
metalloid reduction
8
silver gold
8
absence oxygen
8
vitro biosynthesis
4
biosynthesis te-containing
4
te-containing nanostructures
4
nanostructures exiguobacterium
4
exiguobacterium cell-free
4
extracts background
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!