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The capability of Bacillus pseudomycoides from soil to remove Cu(II) in water and prevent it from entering plants

Authors :
Wanqin Wu
Chunmei Jiang
Bing Pang
Chongyang Ai
Junling Shi
Xiaoguang Xu
Zhongli Pan
Huixin Li
Xixi Zhao
Guanwen Liu
Source :
Journal of Applied Microbiology. 132:1914-1925
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Aims Copper ion is widespread in wastewater and threatens the condition and human health. Micro-organisms have unique advantages to remove heavy-metal ions from water, but are rarely reported in the removal of copper ion. This aims to develop micro-organisms that can remove copper ion in water, characterize their properties and analyse their potential application in practice. Methods and Results Sewage sludge was used as the source to isolate wild bacteria that can remove copper ion in water. The most efficient strain was screened out from 23 obtained isolates, identified as Bacillus pseudomycoides and coded as C6. The properties of C6 in the removal of copper ion in water were investigated in the aspects of reaction conditions, reaction groups, reaction dynamic and the application in oat planting. The reaction at pH 7 within 10 min yielded the highest removal rate of copper ion, 83%. The presence of lead ion in the reaction system could promote the removal rate of copper ion. Carboxyl groups and amidogen of C6 biomass were mainly involved in the removal of copper ion. The removal of copper ion was in accord with single-layer adsorption and Langmuir adsorption isotherm model. In application, C6 biomass reduced the copper content in the oat seedlings grown in copper ion containing water by more than seven times. Conclusions B. pseudomycoides C6 can efficiently remove copper ion in water and inhibit it from entering plants. Significance and Impact of Study This is the first time to report the capability of B. pseudomycoides to remove copper ion in water, which is also more efficient than the currently reported chemical and biological methods.

Details

ISSN :
13652672 and 13645072
Volume :
132
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Applied Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ca7ae567ebea5133f0d3ab92e7959a83
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jam.15343