The microbial community structure and arsenic biogeochemistry in two arsenic impacted aquifers in Bangladesh

Autor: Gnanaprakasam, Edwin, Lloyd, Jonathan, Boothman, Christopher, Matin Ahmed, Kazi, Choudhury, Imtiaz, Bostick, Benjamin, van Green, Alexander, Mailloux, Brian J
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Zdroj: Gnanaprakasam, E, Lloyd, J, Boothman, C, Matin Ahmed, K, Choudhury, I, Bostick, B, van Green, A & Mailloux, B J 2017, ' The microbial community structure and arsenic biogeochemistry in two arsenic impacted aquifers in Bangladesh ', mBio, vol. 8, no. 6, e01326-17 . https://doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01326-17
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.01326-17
Popis: Long-term exposure to trace levels of arsenic (As) in shallow groundwater used for drinking and irrigation puts millions of people at risk of chronic disease. Although microbial processes are implicated in mobilising arsenic from aquifer sediments into groundwater, the precise mechanism remains ambiguous. The goal of this work was to target, for the first time, a comprehensive suite of state-of-the-art molecular techniques in order to better constrain the relationship between indigenous microbial communities and the iron and arsenic mineral phases present in sediments at two well-characterised arsenic impacted aquifers in Bangladesh. At both sites, arsenate (As(V)) was the major species of As present in sediments at depths with low aqueous As concentrations, while most sediment As was arsenite (As(III)) at depths with elevated aqueous As concentrations. This is consistent with a role for the microbial As(V) reduction in mobilising arsenic. The 16S rRNA gene analysis indicated that the arsenic-rich sediments were colonised by diverse bacterial communities implicated in both dissimilatory Fe(III)- and As(V)-reduction, while the correlation analyses involved phylogenetic groups not normally associated with As mobilisation. Findings suggest that direct As redox transformations are central to arsenic fate and transport, and that there is a residual reactive pool of both As(V) and Fe(III) in deeper sediments that could be released by microbial respiration in response to hydrologic perturbation, such as increased groundwater pumping that introduces reactive organic carbon to depth.
Databáze: OpenAIRE