Coupling of selenate reduction and pyrrhotite oxidation by indigenous microbial consortium in natural aquifer

  • Liuliu Li
  • , Wenyue Yan
  • , Baogang Zhang*
  • , Han Zhang
  • , Rongyue Geng
  • , Sijia Sun
  • , Xiaohong Guan
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Pyrrhotite is ubiquitously found in natural environment and involved in diverse (bio)processes. However, the pyrrhotite-driven bioreduction of toxic selenate [Se(VI)] remains largely unknown. This study demonstrates that Se(VI) is successfully bioreduced under anaerobic condition with the participation of pyrrhotite for the first time. Completely removal of Se(VI) was achieved at initial concentration of 10 mg/L Se(VI) and 0.56 mL/min flow rate in continuous column experiment with indigenous microbial consortium and pyrrhotite. Variation in hydrochemistry and hydrodynamics affected Se(VI) removal performance. Se(VI) was reduced to insoluble Se(0) while elements in pyrrhotite were oxidized to Fe(III) and SO42−. Breakthrough study indicated that biotic activity contributed 81.4 ± 1.07% to Se(VI) transformation. Microbial community analysis suggested that chemoautotrophic genera (e.g., Thiobacillus) could realize pyrrhotite oxidation and Se(VI) reduction independently, while heterotrophic genera (e.g., Bacillus, Pseudomonas) contributed to Se(VI) detoxification by utilizing metabolic intermediates generated through Fe(II) and S(-II) oxidation, which were further verified by pure culture tests. Metagenomic and qPCR analyses indicated genes encoding enzymes for Se(VI) reduction (e.g., serA, napA and srdBAC), S oxidation (e.g., soxB) and Fe oxidation (e.g., mtrA) were upregulated. The elevated electron transporters (e.g., nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, cytochrome c) promoted electron transfer from pyrrhotite to Se(VI). This study gains insights into Se biogeochemistry under the effect of Fe(II)-bearing minerals and provides a sustainable strategy for Se(VI) bioremediation in natural aquifer.

Original languageEnglish
Article number119987
JournalWater Research
Volume238
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 Jun 2023

Keywords

  • Biodetoxification
  • Bioreduction
  • Groundwater aquifer
  • Pyrrhotite
  • Selenate

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