Hexavalent chromium, a carcinogen and mutagen, can be reduced to Cr(III) by Desulfovibrio vulgaris NCIMB 8303 and Microbacterium sp. NCIMB 13776. This study examined Cr(VI) reduction by immobilized cells of the two strains in a common solution matrix using various entrapment matrices. Chitosan and PVA-borate beads did not retain integrity and supported low or no reduction of Cr(VI) by the cells. A commercial preparation (Lentikats) was stable but also did not support Cr(VI) reduction. K-carrageenan beads were stable in batch suspensions but gel integrity was lost after only 5 h in a flow-through system in the presence of 100 microM Cr(VI). The best immobilization matrices were agar and agarose, where the initial rates of reduction of Cr(VI) (from 500 microM solution) for D. vulgaris NCIMB 8303 and Microbacterium sp. NCIMB 13776 were 127 (agar) and 130 (agarose), and 15 (agar) and 12 (agarose) nmol h(-1) mg dry cell wt(-1), respectively. The higher removal of Cr(VI) by D. vulgaris was also seen in 14-mL packed-bed flow-through columns, where, at a flow rate of 2.4 mL h(-1), the percentage removal of Cr(VI) was approximately 95% and 60% for D. vulgaris and Microbacterium sp., respectively (agar-immobilized cells). The Cr(VI) reducing activities of D. vulgaris and Microbacterium sp. were lost after 159 and 140 h, respectively. Examination of the beads for structural integrity within the columns in situ using magnetic resonance imaging after 24 and 100 h of continuous operation against Cr(VI) (with negligible Cr retained within the columns) showed that agar beads were more stable with time. The most appropriate system for development of a continuous bioprocess is thus the use of D. vulgaris NCIMB 8303 immobilized in an agar gel matrix.
Bacterial hydrogenases have been harnessed to the removal of heavy metals from solution by reduction to less soluble metal species. For Pd(II), its bioreduction results in the deposition of cell-bound Pd(0)-nanoparticles that are ferromagnetic and have a high catalytic activity. Hydrogenases can also be used synthetically in the production of hydrogen from sugary wastes through breakdown of formate produced by fermentation. The Bio-H(2) produced can be used to power an electrical device using a fuel cell to provide clean electricity. Production of hydrogen from confectionery wastes by one organism (Escherichia coli) can be used as the electron donor for the production of Bio-Pd(0) from soluble Pd(II) by a second organism. The resulting Bio-Pd(0) can then be used as a bioinorganic catalyst in the remediation of Cr(VI)-contaminated solutions or polychlorinated biphenyls at the expense of Bio-H(2), as a hydrogenation catalyst for industry or as a component of a fuel cell electrode.
Resting cells of Desulfovibrio vulgaris NCIMB 8303 and Desulfovibrio desulfuricans NCIMB 8307 were used for the hydrogenase-mediated reduction of Pd(II) to Pd(0). The resulting hybrid palladium bionanocatalyst (Bio-Pd(0)) was used in the reduction of Cr(VI) to the less environmentally problematic Cr(III) species. The reduction of Cr(VI) by free and agar-immobilized Bio-Pd(0) was evaluated. Investigations using catalyst suspensions showed that Cr(VI) reduction was similar ( approximately 170 nmol Cr(VI)/h/mg Bio-Pd(0)) when Bio-Pd(0) was produced using D. vulgaris or D. desulfuricans. Continuous-flow studies using D. vulgaris Bio-Pd(0) with agar as the immobilization matrix investigated the effect of Bio-Pd(0) loading, inlet Cr(VI) concentration, and flow rate on the efficiency of Cr(VI) reduction. Reduction of Cr(VI) was highest at a D. vulgaris Bio-Pd(0) loading of 7.5 mg Bio-Pd(0)/mL agar (3:1 dry cell wt: Pd(0)), an input [Cr(VI)] of 100 microM, and a flow rate of 1.75 mL/h (approx. 3.5 column volumes/h). A mathematical interpretation predicted the activity of the immobilized Bio-Pd(0) for a given set of conditions within 5% of the value found by experiment. Considering the system as an 'artificial enzyme' analog and application of applied enzyme kinetics gave an apparent K(m) value (K(m app)) of 430 microM Cr(VI) and a determined value of flow-through reactor activity which differed by 11% from that predicted mathematically.
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