Characterization of extracellular minerals produced during dissimilatory Fe(III) and U(VI) reduction at 100 degrees C by Pyrobaculum islandicum.

TitleCharacterization of extracellular minerals produced during dissimilatory Fe(III) and U(VI) reduction at 100 degrees C by Pyrobaculum islandicum.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsKashefi K, Moskowitz BM, Lovley DR
JournalGeobiology
Volume6
Issue2
Pagination147-54
Date Published2008 Mar
ISSN1472-4669
KeywordsFerric Compounds, Ferumoxytol, Hot Temperature, Hydrogen, Minerals, Oxidation-Reduction, Pyrobaculum, Uranium, X-Ray Diffraction
Abstract

In order to gain insight into the significance of biotic metal reduction and mineral formation in hyperthermophilic environments, metal mineralization as a result of the dissimilatory reduction of poorly crystalline Fe(III) oxide, and U(VI) reduction at 100 degrees C by Pyrobaculum islandicum was investigated. When P. islandicum was grown in a medium with poorly crystalline Fe(III) oxide as an electron acceptor and hydrogen as an electron donor, the Fe(III) oxide was reduced to an extracellular, ultrafine-grained magnetite with characteristics similar to that found in some hot environments and that was previously thought to be of abiotic origin. Furthermore, cell suspensions of P. islandicum rapidly reduced the soluble and oxidized form of uranium, U(VI), to extracellular precipitates of the highly insoluble U(IV) mineral, uraninite (UO(2)). The reduction of U(VI) was dependent on the presence of hydrogen as the electron donor. These findings suggest that microbes may play a key role in metal deposition in hyperthermophilic environments and provide a plausible explanation for such phenomena as magnetite accumulation and formation of uranium deposits at ca. 100 degrees C.

DOI10.1111/j.1472-4669.2007.00142.x
Alternate JournalGeobiology
PubMed ID18380877