Biologically-Induced Precipitation of Minerals in a Medium with Zinc Under Sulfate-Reducing Conditions

pdf-iconDOROTA WOLICKA1, ANDRZEJ BORKOWSKI1, URSZULA JANKIEWICZ2, WOJCIECH STĘPIEŃ3 and PAWEŁ KOWALCZYK4, 5*

1 Institute of Geochemistry, Mineralogy and Petrology, Faculty of Geology, University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
2 Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Agriculture and Biology, Warsaw University of Life Sciences – SGGW, Warsaw, Poland
3 Department of Soil Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture and Biology, Warsaw University of Life Sciences – SGGW, Warsaw, Poland
4 Department of Microbial Biology, Faculty of Agriculture and Biology, Warsaw University of Life Sciences – SGGW, Warsaw, Poland
5 Bionicum LTD, Warsaw, Poland

* Corresponding author: P. Kowalczyk, Bionicum LTD, Warsaw, Poland; e-mail: pawel.kowalczyk@bionicum.com.pl

Submitted 14 November 2013, revised 6 September 2014, accepted 27 February 2015

Abstract

Sulfate-reducing microbial communities were enriched from soils collected in areas with crude-oil exploitation. Cultures were grown in modified Postgate C medium and minimal medium, with ethanol or lactate as an electron donor. The batch cultures were grown with addition of zinc in concentrations of 100–700 mg/l. A lack of increased protein concentration in the solutions compared with the control batch, was noted in cultures containing over 200 mg Zn2+/l. The 16S rRNA method was applied to determine the specific composition of the selected microorganism communities. The analysis indicated the presence of Desulfovibrio spp., Desulfobulbus spp. and Desulfotomaculum spp. in the communities. Diffractometric analysis indicated the presence of biogenic sphalerite in cultures with 100 and 200 mg Zn2+/l and elemental sulfur in cultures with 200 mg Zn2+/l. Other post culture sediments (300−700 mg Zn2+/l) contained only hopeite [Zn3(PO4)2 . 4H2O] formed abiotically during the experiment, which was confirmed by studies of the activity of sulfate-reducing microbial communities.

Key words: biogenic precipitation, biomineralization, 16S rRNA, sulfate-reducing bacteria, zinc

Introduction

In the topmost part of the lithosphere, zinc is a trace element that poses a serious hazard to the environment. Heavy metals, including zinc, migrate in the hypergenic zone during various petrogenetic and geochemical pro­cesses, resulting in their concentration but equally often in their dispersion. The environmental issue caused by the migration of heavy metals, including zinc, is com­plex. On the one hand, such migration causes disap­pearance of the metals from ore beds, but on the other hand, the metals appear in increasing concentrations in the exploitation area. Ore exploitation and further treatment processes linked with the utilization of the raw ore deposit result in the formation of post-exploi­tation and technological wastes containing significant amounts of metals. Industrial wastes containing zinc are generally formed during the production of batteries, paints, plastics, polymer stabilizers as well as in print­ing enterprises (Fosmire, 1990). Environments con­taminated by zinc may be harmful. Effluents that are naturally generated in waste dumpsites often discharge to surface water reservoirs, watercourses and soil, caus­ing potential hazard to the environment. There are also areas with concentrations of selected metals, e.g., in areas of crude-oil exploitation. At present, there is an urgent need to apply processes that will allow recycling of heavy metals from wastes and poor ores and at the same time will minimize their negative influence on living organisms. Working out of an effective method of zinc recycling, e.g., from spoil tips, requires knowl­edge of the geochemical and mineral-forming pro­cesses taking place in the environment that will allow determination of the stability of the resulting mineral phases. Densification of heavy metals and their forms in soils depends on numerous factors of the physi­cal and chemical environment, e.g., the magnitude of adsorption, the presence of humic acids and other soil components, the pH, the redox potential and others. Additionally, studies should include the role of micro­organisms, especially sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), in the formation of secondary metal sulfides. SRB are a diverse group of anaerobic microorganisms that have the ability to reduce oxidized sulfur compounds and to oxidize organic compounds (Postgate, 1984; Hao et al., 1996). They are considered to be the main producers of hydrogen sulfide in the biosphere. Sulfides that are pro­duced during dissimilatory sulfate reduction may react with metals, including zinc, creating various second­ary sulfides. In recent years, SRB have been applied to neutralize acid mine water, which may contain heavy-metal cations; and sparingly soluble metal sulfides are formed under these conditions (Jonson and Halleberg, 2003; Luptakova and Kusnierova, 2005; Kaksonen and Puhakka, 2007; Ong et al., 2010). Application of SRB to acid mine drainage may remove heavy metals such as zinc from this environment. A few authors have asked why different kinds of minerals are formed during bio­logical processes, and when and what influences these processes. Knowledge of biogeochemical interactions in the environment allows us to describe the processes and to predict them. It was long considered that the high toxicity of many heavy metals affects microbiological precipitation of sulfides by SRB. This opinion changed in 1961 when Becking and Moore (1961) carried out an experiment in which salts of selected metals were added to a medium with a composition close to that of marine water. The results explicitly pointed to SRB participation in the formation of secondary mineral phases because the post-culture sediments contained sphalerite (ZnS), a product of SO42– and ZnCO3 biotransformation. Tak­ing into account the possible geochemical reactions, it can be assumed that in sedimentary settings, heavy-metal ions are largely adsorbed by clay minerals and form metal-organic compounds. All these processes lead to decrease of the toxicity level of a given metal by decreasing its concentration in the solution, although the metal is still capable of reactions with hydrogen sulfide and sulfide formation. On the other hand, the products of biochemical processes may include extra­cellular polymeric substances (EPS), which are mixtures of polysaccharides, mucopolysaccharides and proteins produced by microorganisms. The composition of EPS produced by SRB may be modified by the presence of different forms of organic matter in the environment, which may influence the increase of the metal-binding capacity (Zinkevich et al., 1996) So far, the microbio­logical, geochemical and mineralogical processes lead­ing to the formation of ZnS in environments impacted by human activities remain unrecognized. Spherical aggregates of sphalerite are commonly observed in biofilm structures where anaerobic conditions prevail. These zones are usually dominated by SRB that are relatively tolerant to oxygen, representing the families Desulfobacteraceae and Desulfovibrionaceae (Labrenz et al., 2000; Vainshtein et al., 1992). The precipitation of sphalerite at low temperatures may takes place in mine-water environments (Ledin and Pedersen, 1996; Drury, 1999; Moreau et al., 2004). In order to deter­mine the effect of zinc concentration on the activity of selected groups of microorganisms, experiments were performed in which zinc chloride was added at various concentrations to SRB cultures. There are only a few reports that describe both the influence of SRB on the formation of mineral phases that contain zinc and its effect on SRB activity.

The present study focused on the role of SRB iso­lated from soils with increased zinc concentrations, col­lected in areas of crude-oil exploitation, in the forma­tion of zinc sulfide at high concentrations of the metal. It also focused on the toxicity of zinc in relation to sul­fate reducing microbial communities in batch cultures containing easily accessible carbon sources for SRB, i.e., lactate or ethanol.

Experimental
Materials and Methods

Selection and isolation of sulfate-reducing micro-bial communities. The microorganisms were enriched from soil polluted by crude oil and oil-derived prod­ucts from SE Poland. SRB are commonly found in soils contaminated by crude oil due to the ability to metabolize the oil derived products (Feio et al., 2004). In tested soils samples, C total was 3.2%, total Swas about 120 mg/kg dry weight, total N was about700 mg/kg, and Zn2+ was 92 mg/kg. In the tested soil samples the Zn2+ ions were only determined. First, an Easycult S test (Orion Diagnostica Espoo of Finland) was made to check for the presence of sulfidogenic microorganism communities; next, the microorgan­isms were selected using the microcosm method. Soil samples (10 g) were inserted in 100-ml flasks and cov­ered with 80 ml of the particular medium. Two types of media were applied: a modified Postgate C medium (without yeast extract and sodium citrate) and a mini­mal medium with lactate or ethanol as electron donors. The flasks were tightly closed and incubated in dark­ness for 6 weeks at room temperature (about 22°C) in order to select anaerobic, sulfidogenic microorganism communities capable of simultaneous biodegradation of the applied carbon sources and sulfate reduction. The obtained SRB community was the inoculum to the SRB cultures in main experiment.

Cultures of sulfate-reducing microbial communi­ties. Anaerobic batch cultures in modified liquid Post­gate C medium were carried out in 0.5 l glass bottles filled to 0.25 l volume. The bottles were tightly sealed with rubber stoppers pierced with needles connected permanently to syringes, which were used to intro­duce the inoculum and to collect samples under N2. The inoculum-to-medium ratio was 1:10. The anaero­bic conditions in the cultures were controlled by addi­tion of resazurin as the oxygen-level indicator. Violet colour indicated that the culture contained oxygen, and its absence pointed to anaerobic conditions. The experiment was carried out in two variants, one with ethanol and the other with lactate as the sole carbon source (4000 mg/l). The control batch consisted of SRB cultures without zinc (biotic control) and cultures with zinc and without SRB (abiotic control). The abiotic controls were conducted in order to analyze of min­eral phases formed without microbial activity. All the SRB cultures were stationary and were conducted in the modified Postgate C medium. The experiment and the chemical determinations in cultures were made in duplicate. The experimental setup is shown in Table I.

Media. A modified liquid Postgate C medium (Postgate, 1984), composed of: KH2PO4 (500 mg/l), NH4Cl (1000 mg/l), CaCl2 (60 mg/l), MgSO4 (60 mg/l), FeSO4 (100 mg/l), Na2SO4 (4500 mg/l) without yeast extract and citrate, and a minimal medium (Wolicka and Kowalski, 2006), composed of NH4Cl (1000 mg/l) and Na2SO4 (4500 mg/l), were used in the experiment. Lactate (4000 mg/l) or ethanol (4000 mg/l) were added to both media as the sole carbon sources. Resazurin (1 mg/l) was added to all cultures in order to control the level of oxidation. The medium did not contain yeast extract or sodium citrate. Zn2+ was added in concentra­tions of 100, 200, 500 and 700 mg/l to a modified Post­gate C medium. Zn2+ was added as zinc (II) chloride.

Sulfate determinations were made using the turbi­dimetric method after reaction with barium chloride in a Thermo spectrophotometer at λ = 400 nm wavelength (Greenberg et al., 1985).

Protein determinations in the cultures were made using the Lowry method after a biuret test enhanced by the Folin-Ciocalteau reagent in a Thermo spectro­photometer at λ = 670 nm (Genesys 10Vis, Thermo). The samples (5 ml) for determination were previously sonicated (30 kHz, 30 s) in order to determine total pro­tein from cultures. The measurement was performed as follows. The 1 ml of sonicated sample was put into glass tubes and 5 ml of reagent (49 ml 2% Na2CO3 in 0.1 M NaOH + 0.5 ml 2% potassium sodium tartrate + 0.5 ml 1% CuSO4) was added. After 5 min., 0.2 ml of Folin-Ciocalteau reagent (POCH, Gliwice, Poland) was added and immediately mixed. After 5 min, 0.2 ml 6 M NaOH was added and mixed, then the absorbance of the colored solution was immediately measured spec­trophotometrically. Protein measurements were used as an indicator of biomass.

Zinc determinations in stationary cultures. The determinations were made using the Thermo spectro­photometer with application of available kits for deter­mining zinc concentrations (Merck Zinc Test with a pyridylazo naphthol derivative).

Analysis of the post-culture sediments. After incu­bation, the cultures were centrifuged at 10 000 × g, and the obtained post-culture sediment was dried at 30°C under N2. The samples were next ground in an agate mortar, and their mineral composition was determined using X-ray powder diffraction in a diffractometer (Panalytical X’ Pert PRO MPD). The diffractometric analysis was conducted on 10 samples of post-culture sediments; five were taken from cultures that used etha­nol as the sole carbon source, and five were taken from cultures with lactate as the sole carbon source. Addi­tionally, the analysis of sediments from abiotic control with Zn2+ (500 and 700 mg/l) were also conducted.

Molecular analysis of the selected sulfidogenous microorganism communities. The taxonomic com­position of the sulfate-reducing bacterial communi­ties was obtained using molecular analysis. Isolation of chromosome DNA and analysis of gene 16S rRNA fragments were carried out according to commonly applied procedures of Collins et al. (1991). BacterialDNA was isolated from a fluid culture of microorgan­isms with a commercial kit for chromosomal DNA iso­lation (A&A Biotechnology). The purity and concentra­tion of the resulting DNA preparation were determined spectrophotometrically at 260 nm. Primers specific for bacterial 16S rRNA (27F 5’-AGAGTTTGATCCTG­GCTCAG-3’ and 1492R 5’-GGTTACCTTGTTAC­GACTT-3’) were used to amplify a 1540-bp segment from the 16S rRNA gene. The PCR reaction was made using the GeneAmp PCR reagent kit with AmpliTaq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen). Amplification productswere purified using the Wizard Purification System (Promega) and analyzed by electrophoresis. After ampli­fication, the material was sequenced using the ABI 3730 Genetic Analyzer with application of the Perkin Elmer sequencing kit. The resulting nucleotide sequences were compared with gene 16S rRNA sequences avail­able in the National Centre for Biotechnology Informa­tion (NCBI) database using NCBI’s Blast 2.0 program and showed 99% homology with the corresponding sequences among different anaerobic species.

Table I
Experimental setup
SRB cultures Biotic control Abiotic control

(for diffractometric analysis)

Source of carbon ethanol Lactate ethanol lactate ethanol lactate
Zn2+ concentration

[mg/l]

100 100 0 0 100 100
200 200 200 200
500 500 500 500
700 700 700 700
SRB inoculum 10 % 10 % 10 % 10 % without inoculum without inoculum
Repetitions 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 × 1 × 1 ×

Results and Discussion

The influence of zinc concentrations on the activ­ity of selected SRB communities is presented in Figs. 1 and 2 and the changes of concentration of sulphate and protein in control cultures are presented in Fig. 3. The initial concentration of protein at the level of about 2000 mg/l was derived from the inoculum. A slight increase of protein concentration and decrease of sulfate concentration was observed in cultures where the Zn concentration was 100 mg/l on a medium with ethanol as the sole carbon source (Fig. 1). Such trends were not observed in the remaining cultures, regard­less of the applied carbon source. A slight increase of protein concentration and decrease of sulfate concen­tration was noted in the control batch. Based on the obtained results, it can be stated, that the zinc concen­tration tolerated by the isolated SRB community was 100–200 mg/l.

Fig. 1. Concentration changes of sulfate, protein and zinc in sul­fidogenic microbial cultures with ethanol as the sole organic car­bon source at variable initial concentrations of Zn2+ (100, 200, 500, 700 mg/l). Standard deviation has been marked

The results may partially confirm existing litera­ture data. Zinc is a metal that may hampers in higher concentrations the metabolic activity of various micro­organisms, including SRB (Utgikar et al., 2002), but on the other hand many mechanisms responsible for metal-ion resistance in bacteria have been described (Brocklehurst and Morby, 2000). SRB are effective in reducing the sulfate concentration and neutralizing its acidity. Furthermore, most of the heavy metals present in acidic mine drainage can be precipitated as insolu­ble sulfides using biogenic sulfide produced by sul­fate reduction (Barton and Tomei, 1995; Costa et al.,2008; Martins et al., 2009a). The reported toxic con­centrations of heavy metals to sulfate reducers range from a few mg/l to 100 mg/l (Loka Bharathi et al., 1990;Poulson et al., 1997; Utgikar et al., 2001). Data in the literature indicate that various concentrations of zinc inhibit SRB activity. Radhika et al. (2006) estimated that the concentration of zinc lethal to SRB is about 210 mg/l. Castillo et al. (2012) isolated communi­ties from sediments in two acid streams draining theIberian Pyrite Belt, in which zinc occurred at con­centrations of 400 and 30 mg/l. According to Azabou et al. (2007), a zinc concentration of 400 mg/l is toxic for SRB and inhibits their activity; SRB can carry out metabolic processes at concentrations of up to 150 mg/l (Martins et al., 2009b). Zinc inhibits electron transport in the respiration cycle of microorganisms, and its toxicity in comparison to such metals as Hg, Cd, Cu, Ni, Co and Pb is rather low. There is data in the literatureon the influence of zinc on SRB activity, but there are no reports that simultaneously discuss the influence of zinc concentration on SRB activity and the types of the resulting mineral phases.

Fig. 2. Concentration changes of sulfate, protein and zinc in sul­fidogenic microbial cultures with lactate as the sole organic car­bon source at variable initial concentrations of Zn2+ (100, 200, 500, 700 mg/l ). Standard deviation has been marked

 

Fig. 3. Concentration changes of sulfate and protein in control batches (without addition of Zn2+) of sulfidogenic microbial cul­tures with ethanol (above) or lactate (below) as the sole organic carbon source. Standard deviation has been marked

In the present study, the determination of the influ­ence of Zn2+ on the mineral composition of post-culture sediments was conducted. The presence of zinc sulfide was determined in the post-culture sediments from cul­tures with ethanol as the sole carbon source and 100 mg Zn/l (Fig. 4). In the culture, where the zinc concentra­tion was 200 mg/l, sphalerite (ZnS) as well as elemental sulfur were observed. It could be that elemental sulfur is formed by sulfidogenic bacterial communities. In natural ecosystems, the sulfur cycle should be in bal­ance, meaning that the amount of sulfide that is oxi­dized should correspond to the amount of sulfate that is reduced. Such a balance can be found in a sulfuretum. This is a syntrophical bacterial community in which H2S produced by sulfate-reducing bacteria is reoxidized by the sulfur-compound-oxidizing bacteria. This pro­cess is not as common in the natural environment asdissimilation sulfate reduction, but it should not be excluded (Roy and Trudinger, 1970; Hedderich et al., 1999). The remaining cultures containing more than 200 mg Zn2+/l contained hopeite [Zn3(PO4)2 . H2O], which was probably formed by abiotic processes because the medium used for SRB growth contained phosphates (KH2PO4). The abiotic control batch did not contain any mineral phases except hopeite. Hopeite was detected in abiotic controls containing 500 and 700 mg Zn2+/l.

On a medium with lactate as the sole carbon source (Fig. 2), significant SRB activity could not be observed, but a slight increase of protein content in the cultures worth noting, pointing to the development of micro­organisms accompanying SRB that were capable of activity in the presence of high zinc concentrations. The significant decrease of zinc concentration may have been the effect of this microflora activity, althoughthis fact cannot be unambiguously confirmed. The effect of inoculum can be appear only at initial stage of experiment, when it can be observed the slight decrease of zinc concentration. A considerable impedi­ment in the analysis of the results is also the lack of determination of the minerals in post-culture sedi­ments that could not be obtained using X-ray diffrac­tion. This lack probably was caused by the low number of mineral phases in the post-culture sediment and precipitation of amorphous or nanostructured chemi­cal compounds, which often accompany EPS organic compounds. Moreau et al. (2007) suggest that formation of mineral aggregates is induced by extracellular metal-binding polypeptides and proteins. Disordered morpho­logical features of zinc sulfides have been described byGramp et al. (2007), who tested for formation of Zn sulfides n cultures of SRB.

The 16S rRNA method was applied in order to determine the specific composition of the selected microorganism communities. The analysis indicated the presence of Desulfovibrio spp., Desulfobulbus spp. and Desulfotomaculum spp. in the communities. Some of these microorganisms are capable of sulfate reduc­tion to elemental sulfur, which was confirmed by dif­fractometric analysis of the post-culture sediments. Moreover, removal of hydrogen sulfide from the envi­ronment by formation of sulfides results in a decrease of the reducing conditions that are indispensable for SRB activity (Labrenz et al., 2000).

Fig. 4. X-ray powder diffractograms of post-culture sediments in cultures of selected SRB communities on a modified Postgate medium with ethanol as the sole carbon source and with addition of Zn2+ in concentrations of 100–700 mg/l. Symbols: Zn, sphalerite ZnS; Hp, hopeite Zn3(PO4)2 · H2O; S, sulfur

Conclusions

The results supplement the knowl­edge of the mineral-forming processes taking place in cultures with various concentrations of zinc and indicate a possibly significant participation of SRB in the processes taking place in the natural environment under hypergenic conditions. Moreover, they indi­cate the possible application of SRB in the treatment of acid mine drainage, but the high concentrations of metals potentially can limit the SRB activity. Cultures with zinc showed strong inhibition of the activity of selected sulfidogenic communities in cultures con­taining 200 mg Zn2+/l. The post-culture sediments of cultures in a Postgate medium with ethanol as the sole carbon source contained sphalerite (cultures containing 100 mg Zn2+/l) and elemental sulfur (cultures containing 200 mg Zn2+/l). In the remaining cultures, in which the content of zinc ions was much higher, the post-culture sediments contained zinc phosphate formed by abiotic processes. The results confirm the participation of SRB in mineral-forming processes in environments containing zinc.

Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the Polish Oil & Gas Company, espe­cially Jozef Potera and Tadeusz Kozimor from the Sanok Branch and Zbigniew Ząbkiewicz from Warsaw. This work was supported by the Institute of Geochemistry, Mineralogy and Petrology under BST Grant No. IGMiP-28-2012. The authors thank Reviewers for their remarks and comments which have improved this article.

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