Artículos de revistas
Heavy metal resistance strategies of acidophilic bacteria and their acquisition: Importance for biomining and bioremediation
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Biological Research, Volumen 46, Issue 4, 2018, Pages 363-371
07169760
07176287
10.4067/S0716-97602013000400008
Autor
Navarro, Claudio A.
von Bernath, Diego
Jerez, Carlos A.
Institución
Resumen
Microbial solubilizing of metals in acid environments is successfully used in industrial bioleaching of ores or biomining to extract metals such as copper, gold, uranium and others. This is done mainly by acidophilic and other microorganisms that mobilize metals and generate acid mine drainage or AMD, causing serious environmental problems. However, bioremediation or removal of the toxic metals from contaminated soils can be achieved by using the specific properties of the acidophilic microorganisms interacting with these elements. These bacteria resist high levels of metals by using a few "canonical" systems such as active efflux or trapping of the metal ions by metal chaperones. Nonetheless, gene duplications, the presence of genomic islands, the existence of additional mechanisms such as passive instruments for pH and cation homeostasis in acidophiles and an inorganic polyphosphate-driven metal resistance mechanism have also been proposed. Horizontal gene transfer in environmental m