Abstract
Understanding bacterial metal detoxification systems is crucial for determining the environmental impacts of metal pollution and for developing advanced bioremediation and water disinfection strategies. Here, we explore the role of cell surface sulfhydryl sites in bacterial detoxification of Cd, using Pseudomonas putida with surface sulfhydryl sites mostly on its EPS molecules as a model organism. Our results show that 5 and 20 ppm Cd in LB growth medium affects the lag phase of P. putida, but not the overall extent of cell growth at stationary phase, indicating that P. putida can detoxify Cd at these concentrations. EXAFS analysis of Cd bound to biomass from the different growth stages indicates that Cd binds to both sulfhydryl and non-sulfhydryl sites, but that the importance of Cd-sulfhydryl binding increases from early exponential to stationary phase. Cell growth is positively correlated to the measured sulfhydryl concentration on different biomass samples, but is independent of the measured non-sulfhydryl binding site concentration on the cell surfaces. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the sulfhydryl binding sites on EPS molecules can play an important role in binding and detoxifying toxic metals, significantly decreasing the bioavailability of the metal by sequestering it away from the bacterial cells.
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