TY - JOUR
T1 - A chemical equilibrium model for metal adsorption onto bacterial surfaces
AU - Fein, Jeremy B.
AU - Daughney, Christopher J.
AU - Yee, Nathan
AU - Davis, Thomas A.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments--This work was funded by a Canadian NSERC Operating Grant, and a Quebec FCAR Nouveaux Chercheurs research grant to J. B. F. while he was at McGill University. We are indebted to Jean-Francois Boily, Peter Wightman, and Lawrence Yane for help conducting some of the preliminary experiments that paved the way. We thank Alfonso Mucci for use of his autotitratur, and for reviewing an early version of the text, and Antoinette Edgar Fein for cditing thc manuscript. Thorough journal reviews by J. Drever, K. Jackson, S. Poulson, and an anonymous reviewer significantly improved the investigation, and are greatly appreciated.
PY - 1997/8
Y1 - 1997/8
N2 - This study quantifies metal adsorption onto cell wall surfaces of Bacillus subtilis by applying equilibrium thermodynamics to the specific chemical reactions that occur at the water-bacteria interface. We use acid/base titrations to determine deprotonation constants for the important surface functional groups, and we perform metal-bacteria adsorption experiments, using Cd, Cu, Pb, and Al, to yield site-specific stability constants for the important metal-bacteria surface complexes. The acid/base properties of the cell wall of B. subtilis can best be characterized by invoking three distinct types of surface organic acid functional groups, with pKa values of 4.82 ± 0.14, 6.9 ± 0.5, and 9.4 ± 0.6. These functional groups likely correspond to carboxyl, phosphate, and hydroxyl sites, respectively, that are displayed on the cell wall surface. The results of the metal adsorption experiments indicate that both the carboxyl sites and the phosphate sites contribute to metal uptake. The values of the log stability constants for metal-carboxyl surface complexes range from 3.4 for Cd, 4.2 for Pb, 4.3 for Cu, to 5.0 for Al. These results suggest that the stabilities of the metal-surface complexes are high enough for metal-bacterial interactions to affect metal mobilities in many aqueous systems, and this approach enables quantitative assessment of the effects of bacteria on metal mobilities.
AB - This study quantifies metal adsorption onto cell wall surfaces of Bacillus subtilis by applying equilibrium thermodynamics to the specific chemical reactions that occur at the water-bacteria interface. We use acid/base titrations to determine deprotonation constants for the important surface functional groups, and we perform metal-bacteria adsorption experiments, using Cd, Cu, Pb, and Al, to yield site-specific stability constants for the important metal-bacteria surface complexes. The acid/base properties of the cell wall of B. subtilis can best be characterized by invoking three distinct types of surface organic acid functional groups, with pKa values of 4.82 ± 0.14, 6.9 ± 0.5, and 9.4 ± 0.6. These functional groups likely correspond to carboxyl, phosphate, and hydroxyl sites, respectively, that are displayed on the cell wall surface. The results of the metal adsorption experiments indicate that both the carboxyl sites and the phosphate sites contribute to metal uptake. The values of the log stability constants for metal-carboxyl surface complexes range from 3.4 for Cd, 4.2 for Pb, 4.3 for Cu, to 5.0 for Al. These results suggest that the stabilities of the metal-surface complexes are high enough for metal-bacterial interactions to affect metal mobilities in many aqueous systems, and this approach enables quantitative assessment of the effects of bacteria on metal mobilities.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0016-7037(97)00166-X
DO - 10.1016/S0016-7037(97)00166-X
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0031418953
SN - 0016-7037
VL - 61
SP - 3319
EP - 3328
JO - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
IS - 16
ER -