Login / Signup

High-affinity amide-lanthanide adsorption to gram-positive soil bacteria.

Elliot ChangLaura N LammersCéline Pallud
Published in: Environmental microbiology reports (2023)
The gram-positive soil bacterium, Arthrobacter nicotianae, uses multiple organic acid functional groups to adsorb lanthanides onto its cell surface. At relevant soil pH conditions of 4.0-6.0, many of these functional groups are de-protonated and available for cation sorption and metal immobilization. However, among the plethora of naturally occurring site types, A. nicotianae is shown to possess high-affinity amide and phosphate sites that disproportionately affect lanthanide adsorption to the cell wall. We quantify neodymium (Nd)-selective site types, reporting an amide-Nd stability constant of log 10 K = 6.41 ± 0.23 that is comparable to sorption via phosphate-based moieties. These sites are two to three orders of magnitude more selective for Nd than the adsorption of divalent metals to ubiquitous carboxyl-based moieties. This implies the importance of lanthanide biosorption in the context of metal transport in subsurface systems despite trace concentrations of lanthanides found in the natural environment.
Keyphrases