Abstract

Bacteria–Au interactions control the fate of Au in a variety of geologic systems. Although previous studies have determined that non-metabolizing Bacillus subtilis cells can remove Au(III) from solution via cell surface adsorption reactions, and that upon removal Au(III) is rapidly reduced to Au(I) and remains bound to the cell surface, the mechanism of Au(III) removal by B. subtilis is poorly understood. This study provides further constraints on the mechanisms responsible for Au(III) removal by B. subtilis by conducting batch Au(III) removal experiments as a function of pH and Au loading (Au:biomass ratio) using biomass with and without two different types of treatment: (1) a treatment to remove extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) from the biomass, and (2) a treatment to irreversibly block surface sulfhydryl sites from Au binding. The experimental results suggest that Au(III) removal can be attributed primarily to Au complexation with bacterial sulfhydryl sites, but that Au–amino binding is also important under some conditions. Our experiments also suggest that Au–sulfhydryl binding occurs predominantly on EPS molecules produced by B. subtilis, and that Au–amino binding is also important and is located within the bacterial cell envelope. These findings are the first to constrain the location of sulfhydryl-binding sites for B. subtilis biomass, and they are the first to demonstrate the important role played by bacterial EPS in the process of Au adsorption and reduction by bacteria.

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