Artículos de revistas
Enrichment of arsenic transforming and resistant heterotrophic bacteria from sediments of two salt lakes in Northern Chile
Date
2012-05Registration in:
Lara, José Augusto; Escudero González, Lorena; Ferrero, Marcela Alejandra; Chong Díaz, Guillermo ; Pedrós Alió, Carlos; et al.; Enrichment of arsenic transforming and resistant heterotrophic bacteria from sediments of two salt lakes in Northern Chile; Springer Tokyo; Extremophiles; 16; 3; 5-2012; 523-538
1431-0651
1433-4909
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Author
Lara, José Augusto
Escudero González, Lorena
Ferrero, Marcela Alejandra
Chong Díaz, Guillermo
Pedrós Alió, Carlos
Demergasso, Cecilia
Abstract
Microbial populations are involved in the arsenic biogeochemical cycle in catalyzing arsenic transformations and playing indirect roles. To investigate which ecotypes among the diverse microbial communities could have a role in cycling arsenic in salt lakes in Northern Chile and to obtain clues to facilitate their isolation in pure culture, sediment samples from Salar de Ascotán and Salar de Atacama were cultured in diluted LB medium amended with NaCl and arsenic, at different incubation conditions. The samples and the cultures were analyzed by nucleic acid extraction, fingerprinting analysis, and sequencing. Microbial reduction of As was evidenced in all the enrichments carried out in anaerobiosis. The results revealed that the incubation factors were more important for determining the microbial community structure than arsenic species and concentrations. The predominant microorganisms in enrichments from both sediments belonged to the Firmicutes and Proteobacteria phyla, but most of the bacterial ecotypes were confined to only one system. The occurrence of an active arsenic biogeochemical cycle was suggested in the system with the highest arsenic content that included populations compatible with microorganisms able to transform arsenic for energy conservation, accumulate arsenic, produce H 2, H 2S and acetic acid (potential sources of electrons for arsenic reduction) and tolerate high arsenic levels.