“…The V resistance in microorganisms is unclear, and few reports of vanadium resistance genes, including the VAN1 and VAN2 (also known as VRG4) identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, exist [8,9,25]. The B. megaterium genome contains predicted open reading frames of 110 genes involved in stress responses: 46 in oxidative stress-11 for protection from reactive oxygen species (ROS), 24 for oxidative stress, 2 for glutathione:non-redox reactions, 6 for redox-dependent regulation, 2 for glutaredoxins, and 1 for the CoA disulfide thiol-disulfide redox system-26 for osmotic stress, 14 for heat shock, 2 for cold shock, and 1 for detoxification [14], and some Ni-V resistance genes including proton efflux/ influx pumps. The genes nccA, hant (high-affinity nickel transporter), VAN2, and a metallothionein smtAB were previously identified by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) approach in B. megaterium strain MNSH1-9K-1 (GenBank accession number KM654562.1) (Fierros-Romero G, unpublished data), which was isolated from a mining site located in Guanajuato, Mexico, and showed the ability to remove 141.5 mg/kg (33.1 %) of nickel and 1101.51 mg/ kg (50.8 %) of vanadium from a spent catalyst [9].…”