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Bacterial Arsenic Metabolism and Its Role in Arsenic Bioremediation

Journal

CURRENT MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 79, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00284-022-02810-y

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Funding

  1. DHESTBT (WB-DBT) [30 (Sanc.)-BT/ST/P/ST/2G-48/2017]
  2. SRF (State Fund) [Fc (Sc.)/RS/SF/BOT./2017-18/22]

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Arsenic contamination has detrimental effects on various living organisms, and therefore, it is important to explore different techniques to minimize its toxicity. The use of arsenic-loving bacteria for bioremediation has gained significant attention. Bacteria uptake arsenic species and metabolize them into less toxic forms. Rhizospheric bacteria associated with specific plants play a role in enhancing phytoextraction. Passive remediation techniques and emerging technologies such as phytosuction separation have promising potential for arsenic removal.
Arsenic contaminations, often adversely influencing the living organisms, including plants, animals, and the microbial communities, are of grave apprehension. Many physical, chemical, and biological techniques are now being explored to minimize the adverse affects of arsenic toxicity. Bioremediation of arsenic species using arsenic loving bacteria has drawn much attention. Arsenate and arsenite are mostly uptaken by bacteria through aquaglycoporins and phosphate transporters. After entering arsenic inside bacterial cell arsenic get metabolized (e.g., reduction, oxidation, methylation, etc.) into different forms. Arsenite is sequentially methylated into monomethyl arsenic acid (MMA) and dimethyl arsenic acid (DMA), followed by a transformation of less toxic, volatile trimethyl arsenic acid (TMA). Passive remediation techniques, including adsorption, biomineralization, bioaccumulation, bioleaching, and so on are exploited by bacteria. Rhizospheric bacterial association with some specific plants enhances phytoextraction process. Arsenic-resistant rhizospheric bacteria have immense role in enhancement of crop plant growth and development, but their applications are not well studied till date. Emerging techniques like phytosuction separation (PS-S) have a promising future, but still light to be focused on these techniques. Plant-associated bioremediation processes like phytoextraction and phytosuction separation (PS-S) techniques might be modified by treating with potent bacteria for furtherance.

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