Regulatory roles of extracellular polymeric substances in uranium reduction via extracellular electron transfer by Desulfovibrio vulgaris UR1.

Environ Res

Engineering Research Center of Ministry of Education on Groundwater Pollution Control and Remediation, College of Water Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, PR China. Electronic address:

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists are studying how certain bacteria can help clean up water that has uranium in it by changing a harmful form (U(VI)) into a safer form (U(IV)).
  • They discovered a specific type of bacteria called Desulfovibrio vulgaris UR1 that can remove a lot of uranium from the water, and they found that special substances produced by these bacteria, called extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), are really important for this process.
  • The research showed that when they added EPS to the bacteria, uranium removal rates were much higher compared to when EPS was removed or not included, indicating that EPS helps the bacteria do their job better.

Article Abstract

The pathway of reducing U(VI) to insoluble U(IV) using electroactive bacteria has become an effective and promising approach to address uranium-contaminated water caused by human activities. However, knowledge regarding the roles of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) in the uranium reduction process involving in extracellular electron transfer (EET) mechanisms is limited. Here, this study isolated a novel U(VI)-reducing strain, Desulfovibrio vulgaris UR1, with a high uranium removal capacity of 2.75 mM/(g dry cell). Based on a reliable EPS extraction method (45 °C heating), manipulation of EPS in D. vulgaris UR1 suspensions (removal or addition of EPS) highlighted its critical role in facilitating uranium reduction efficiency. On the second day, U(VI) removal rates varied significantly across systems with different EPS contents: 60.8% in the EPS-added system, 48.5% in the pristine system, and 22.2% in the EPS-removed system. Characterization of biogenic solids confirmed the reduction of U(VI) by D. vulgaris UR1, and the main products were uraninite and UO (2.88-4.32 nm in diameter). As EPS formed a permeable barrier, these nanoparticles were primarily immobilized within the EPS in EPS-retained/EPS-added cells, and within the periplasm in EPS-removed cells. Multiple electroactive substances, such as tyrosine/tryptophan aromatic compounds, flavins, and quinone-like substances, were identified in EPS, which might be the reason for enhancement of uranium reduction via providing more electron shuttles. Furthermore, proteomics revealed that a large number of proteins in EPS were enriched in the subcategories of catalytic activity and electron transfer activity. Among these, iron-sulfur proteins, such as hydroxylamine reductase (P31101), pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase (A0A0H3A501), and sulfite reductase (P45574), played the most critical role in regulating EET in D. vulgaris UR1. This work highlighted the importance of EPS in the uranium reduction by D. vulgaris UR1, indicating that EPS functioned as both a reducing agent and a permeation barrier for access to heavy metal uranium.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2024.119862DOI Listing

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Regulatory roles of extracellular polymeric substances in uranium reduction via extracellular electron transfer by Desulfovibrio vulgaris UR1.

Environ Res

December 2024

Engineering Research Center of Ministry of Education on Groundwater Pollution Control and Remediation, College of Water Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, PR China. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • Scientists are studying how certain bacteria can help clean up water that has uranium in it by changing a harmful form (U(VI)) into a safer form (U(IV)).
  • They discovered a specific type of bacteria called Desulfovibrio vulgaris UR1 that can remove a lot of uranium from the water, and they found that special substances produced by these bacteria, called extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), are really important for this process.
  • The research showed that when they added EPS to the bacteria, uranium removal rates were much higher compared to when EPS was removed or not included, indicating that EPS helps the bacteria do their job better.
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