Abstract

Biotransformation of arsenic (As) influences its speciation and mobility, obscuring mechanistic comprehension on spatiotemporal variation of As concentration in geogenic contaminated groundwater. In particular, unresolved processes underlying As redox disequilibrium in comparison to major redox couples discourage practical efforts to rehabilitate the As-contaminated groundwater. Here, quantitative metagenomic sequencing and ultrahigh-resolution mass spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS) were jointly applied to reveal the links between vertical distribution of As metabolic gene assemblages and that of free energy density of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in As-contaminated groundwater of Datong Basin. Observed small excess of Gibbs free energy available by DOM relative to that required for As(V)-to-As(III) reduction exerts thermodynamic constraint on metabolism-mediated redox transformation of As. Accordingly, the vertical distribution of dissolved As(V)/As(III) ratio correlated significantly with that of ars+acr3 and arr encoding As(V) reduction and aio encoding As(III) oxidation in the moderately/strongly reducing groundwater. Further gene-informed biogeochemical modeling suggests that a net effect of these kinetics-restricted bidirectional metabolic pathways leads to co-preservation of As(V) and As(III) even at relatively high rates of ars+acr3 encoded As(V) reduction. This study therefore provides new insights into bioenergetic constraints on As hydrobiogeochemical behavior, with implications for other redox-sensitive contaminants in the groundwater systems.

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