Abstract

Despite the wide-ranging proscription of hexavalent chromium, chromium(VI) remains among the major polluting heavy metals worldwide. Aerobic methane-oxidizing bacteria are widespread environmental microorganisms that can perform diverse reactions using methane as the feedstock. The methanotroph Methylococcus capsulatus Bath, like many other microorganisms, detoxifies chromium(VI) by reduction to chromium(III). Here, the interaction of chromium species with M. capsulatus Bath was examined in detail by using a range of techniques. Cell fractionation and high-performance liquid chromatography-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (HPLC-ICP-MS) indicated that externally provided chromium(VI) underwent reduction and was then taken up into the cytoplasmic and membranous fractions of the cells. This was confirmed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) of intact cultures that indicated negligible chromium on the surfaces of or outside the cells. Distribution of chromium and other elements within intact and sectioned cells, as observed via transmission electron microscopy (TEM) combined with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) and electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS), was consistent with the cytoplasm/membrane location of the chromium(III), possibly as chromium phosphate. The cells could also take up chromium(III) directly from the medium in a metabolism-dependent fashion and accumulate it. These results indicate a novel pattern of interaction with chromium species distinct from that observed previously with other microorganisms. They also suggest that M. capsulatus and similar methanotrophs may contribute directly to chromium(VI) reduction and accumulation in mixed communities of microorganisms that are able to perform methane-driven remediation of chromium(VI).IMPORTANCEM. capsulatus Bath is a well-characterized aerobic methane-oxidizing bacterium that has become a model system for biotechnological development of methanotrophs to perform useful reactions for environmental cleanup and for making valuable chemicals and biological products using methane gas. Interest in such technology has increased recently owing to increasing availability of low-cost methane from fossil and biological sources. Here, it is demonstrated that this versatile methanotroph can reduce the toxic contaminating heavy metal chromium(VI) to the less toxic form chromium(III) while accumulating the chromium(III) within the cells. This is expected to diminish the bioavailability of the chromium and make it less likely to be reoxidized to chromium(VI). Thus, M. capsulatus has the capacity to perform methane-driven remediation of chromium-contaminated water and other materials and to accumulate the chromium in the low-toxicity chromium(III) form within the cells.

Highlights

  • Despite the wide-ranging proscription of hexavalent chromium, chromium(VI) remains among the major polluting heavy metals worldwide

  • In order to characterize the range of chromium(VI) concentrations over which M. capsulatus could remediate all or most of the added chromium(VI), various concentrations of chromium(VI) were added to cultures of M. capsulatus Bath, and the cultures were incubated at 45°C in the presence of methane and air

  • The results reported here indicate the capacity of M. capsulatus Bath to reduce chromium(VI) at concentrations up to several milligrams per liter or milligrams per gram, which are relevant to current contaminated groundwater and solid waste problems [7, 9,10,11]

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the wide-ranging proscription of hexavalent chromium, chromium(VI) remains among the major polluting heavy metals worldwide. IMPORTANCE M. capsulatus Bath is a well-characterized aerobic methane-oxidizing bacterium that has become a model system for biotechnological development of methanotrophs to perform useful reactions for environmental cleanup and for making valuable chemicals and biological products using methane gas Interest in such technology has increased recently owing to increasing availability of low-cost methane from fossil and biological sources. A diverse group of environmental bacteria that are able to use methane as their carbon and energy source, are significant as a global methane sink Methanotrophs and their enzymes have been explored for a range of biotechnologically valuable methane-driven processes, including bioremediation and production of single-cell protein, and as catalysts for oxygenation of unfunctionalized carbon atoms in organic molecules [15,16,17,18,19]. Methane-driven chromium(VI) reduction has been achieved in a methane-fed polymicrobial biofilm reactor system [21], where some of the reduction of Cr(VI) is attributed to nonmethanotrophs scavenging nutrients (multicarbon compounds and more generally accessible C1 substrates such as methanol) produced by the methanotrophs

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