1. Production of methylmercury by methanogens in mercury contaminated estuarine sediments.
- Author
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Wang Y, Roth S, Schaefer JK, Reinfelder JR, and Yee N
- Subjects
- Alkanesulfonic Acids pharmacology, Anaerobiosis, Archaea genetics, Archaea metabolism, Estuaries, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Mercury metabolism, Methanosarcinaceae genetics, Methanosarcinaceae isolation & purification, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Geologic Sediments microbiology, Methanosarcinaceae metabolism, Methylmercury Compounds metabolism, Microbiota, Water Pollutants, Chemical metabolism
- Abstract
Anaerobic bacteria are known to produce neurotoxic methylmercury [MeHg] when elemental mercury [Hg(0)] is provided as the sole mercury source. In this study, we examined the formation of MeHg in anaerobic incubations of sediment collected from the San Jacinto River estuary (Texas, USA) amended with aqueous Hg(0) to investigate the microbial communities involved in the conversion of Hg(0) to MeHg. The results show that the addition of the methanogen inhibitor 2-bromoethanesulfonate (BES) significantly decreased MeHg production. The mercury methylation gene, hgcA, was detected in these sediments using archaeal specific primers, and 16S rRNA sequencing showed that a member of the Methanosarcinaceae family of methanogens was active. These results suggest that methanogenic archaea play an underappreciated role in the production of MeHg in estuarine sediments contaminated with Hg(0)., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of FEMS.)
- Published
- 2020
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