Abstract

Pollutants of inorganic nature (acids, alkalis, mineral salts of different composition, metals) change the course of biological processes of environmental purification, but their influence on the physiological properties of phototrophic sulfur bacteria has not been studied enough. The usage of nitrite ions as an electron donor of anoxygenic photosynthesis by cells of phototrophic green and purple sulfur bacteria Chlorobium limicola IMV K-8, Thiocapsa sp. Ya-2003 and Lamprocystis sp. Ya-2003, isolated from Yavorivske Lake, under the influence of the most widespread inorganic pollutants – hydro- and dihydrophosphates, sulfates, chlorides and chlorates, has been studied. It is shown that KH2PO4, K2HPO4, Na2SO4, NaCl and KClO3, present in the van Niel medium with 4.2 mM NaNO2 at concentrations that are 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0 times different from the maximum permissible concentrations (MPC), influenced the biomass accumulation and nitrite ions oxidation by phototrophic green and purple sulfur bacteria. In media with hydro- and dihydrophosphate ions at concentrations 4.0 times higher than the MPC, inhibition of bacterial growth was up to 1.7 times lower than in the control. The biomass accumulation by bacteria in media with chloride and chlorate ions at concentrations 3.0–4.0 times higher than MPC was 2.0–2.8 times lower compared to the control. In the medium with Na2SO4 at concentrations 2.0–4.0 times higher than MPC, the biomass was 2.0–4.0 times lower than in the control. Nitrites’ oxidation by all strains in the media with the studied pollutants was slowed down. The residual content of nitrite ions in media with hydro- and dihydrophosphate, chloride and chlorate ions at their concentrations 4.0 times higher than MPC, exceeded the NO2– content in the control variants up to 1.7 times. If in the medium without pollutants the cells of C. limicola IMV K-8, Thiocapsa sp. Ya-2003 and Lamprocystis sp. Ya-2003 strains oxidized 72.7%, 72.2% and 71.4%, respectively, of nitrite ions present in the medium, then in the medium with sulfate ions at concentration 4.0 times higher than the MPC, bacteria oxidized nitrite ions only at 39.6%, 34.4% and 27.0%, respectively. Oxidation of a lower quantity of nitrites by phototrophic bacteria in the media with inorganic pollutants led to the production by them of a lower quantity of nitrates. The content of NO3– in the media with hydro-, dihydrophosphate and chlorate ions at all concentrations was up to 1.9 times lower than in the control. In media with sulfate ions at concentrations 2.0–4.0 times higher than MPC and chloride at concentration 4.0 times higher than MPC, the content of nitrate ions was 2.1–4.3 and 2.0 times, respectively, lower than in the control variants. Inorganic pollutants stimulated the synthesis of intracellular carbohydrates in C. limicola IMV K-8. If the content of intracellular glucose in cells grown in the medium without pollutants was 10.3 mg/g dry cell weight, then in cells grown in media with K2HPO4, KH2PO4, Na2SO4, NaCl and KClO3 at concentrations 4.0 times higher than MPC, its content increased by 12.2%, 10.7%, 51.6%, 17.1% and 35.9%, respectively. The glycogen content in the cells grown in the medium without pollutants was 45.1 mg/g dry cell weight. Hydro- and dihydrophosphate, chloride and chlorate ions at concentrations 4.0 times higher than MPC stimulated glycogen synthesis in cells by 47.5%, 57.6%, 67.4% and 74.6%, respectively. The glycogen content in cells grown in the medium with Na2SO4 at concentrations 3.0 and 4.0 times higher than MPC increased by 102.9% and 107.5%, respectively. Therefore, it is established that pollutants of inorganic nature affect the physiological properties of photosynthetic sulfur bacteria and thus change the course of biological processes of environment purification, in particular, from nitrite ions.

Highlights

  • Phototrophic bacteria are a morphologically diverse group of gramnegative prokaryotes that are widespread in freshwater, marine sediments, and wastewater (Dahl, 2017)

  • In green phototrophic bacteria this system is localized in chlorosomes, vesicle-like organelles attached to the cytoplasmic membrane from the cytoplasm side by a crystalline basal plate that contain bacteriochlorophyll aggregates in the form of rod-shaped elements surrounded by a lipid monolayer (Lengeler et al, 2005)

  • The biomass accumulation by bacteria in the media with the highest studied concentration of these compounds – 4.0 times higher than the maximum permissible concentrations (MPC), was only 1.5–1.7 times lower compared to the control

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Summary

Introduction

Phototrophic bacteria are a morphologically diverse group of gramnegative prokaryotes that are widespread in freshwater, marine sediments, and wastewater (Dahl, 2017). Phototrophic sulfur bacteria play an important role in restoring the balance of chemical elements in water bodies through the use of CO2 as a carbon source and reduced compounds of sulfur (sulfides, thiosulfates), nitrogen (nitrites), Fe(II), molecular hydrogen or organic compounds as exogenous electron donors in the process of anoxygenic photosynthesis (Kondratieva, 1989; Schott et al, 2010) This property of bacteria is due to the presence in them of integrated into the cytoplasmic membrane and intracytoplasmic photosynthetic membrane systems light-collecting pigment-protein complexes (antennas), which include bacteriochlorophylls and carotenoids, which absorb photons and transfer excitation energy to photochemical reaction centers (Kondratieva, 1989; Dahl, 2017; Hallenbeck, 2017). Sometimes a synthesis of reserve product in the form of glucose and a product of its polymerization – glycogen can occur (Gorishniy et al, 2008)

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