Abstract

The widespread use of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) raises the potential for environmental releases that could impact microbial ecosystem services. In the present study, the authors address how the AgNPs and Ag(+) that they release may impact nitrogen-cycling bacteria. The authors studied the cellular and transcriptional response of the denitrifier Pseudomonas stutzeri, the nitrogen fixer Azotobacter vinelandii, and the nitrifier Nitrosomonas europaea exposed to 35 nm (carbon-coated) AgNPs or to Ag(+) (added as AgNO3 ). Based on minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs), Ag(+) was 20 times to 48 times more toxic to the tested strains than AgNPs (including Ag(+) released during exposure). Exposure to sublethal concentrations of AgNPs or Ag(+) (representing 10% of the respective MIC for AgNO3 ) resulted in no significant effect on the expression of the denitrifying genes narG, napB, nirH, and norB in P. stutzeri or the nitrogen-fixing genes nifD, nifH, vnfD, and anfD in A. vinelandii, whereas nitrifying genes (amoA1 and amoC2) in N. europaea were upregulated (2.1- to 3.3-fold). This stimulatory effect disappeared at higher silver concentrations (60% of the Ag(+) MIC), and toxicity was exerted at concentrations higher than 60% of the Ag(+) MIC. The MIC for N. europaea was 8 times to 24 times lower than for the other strains, indicating higher susceptibility to AgNPs. This was corroborated by the lower half-lethal concentration for N. europaea (87 µg/L) compared with P. stutzeri (124 µg/L) and A. vinelandii (>250 µg/L) when cells were exposed with Ag(+) for 24 h in 1 mM bicarbonate buffer. This suggests that ammonia oxidation would be the most vulnerable nitrogen-cycling process in wastewater treatment plants receiving AgNPs and in agricultural soils amended with biosolids that concentrate them.

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