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research article

Variability in arsenic methylation efficiency across aerobic and anaerobic microorganisms

Viacava, Karen  
•
Meibom, Karin Lederballe  
•
Ortega, David
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October 30, 2020
Environmental Science & Technology

Microbially-mediated methylation of arsenic (As) plays an important role in the As biogeochemical cycle, particularly in rice paddy soils where methylated As, generated microbially, is translocated into rice grains. The presence of the arsenite (As(III)) methyltransferase gene (arsM) in soil microbes has been used as an indication of their capacity for As methylation. Here, we evaluate the ability of seven microorganisms encoding active ArsM enzymes to methylate As. Amongst those, only the aerobic species were efficient methylators. The anaerobic microorganisms presented high resistance to As exposure, presumably through their efficient As(III) efflux, but methylated As poorly. The only exception were methanogens, for which efficient As methylation was seemingly an artifact of membrane disruption. Deletion of an efflux pump gene (acr3) in one of the anaerobes, Clostridium pasteurianum, rendered the strain sensitive to As and capable of more efficiently methylating As. Our results led to the following conclusions: (i) encoding a functional ArsM enzyme does not guarantee that a microorganism will actively drive As methylation in the presence of the metalloid and (ii) there is an inverse relationship between efficient microbial As efflux and its methylation, because the former prevents the intracellular accumulation of As.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.0c03908
Author(s)
Viacava, Karen  
Meibom, Karin Lederballe  
Ortega, David
Dyer, Shannon
Gelb, Arnaud  
Falquet, Leia
Minton, Nigel P.
Mestrot, Adrien
Bernier-Latmani, Rizlan  
Date Issued

2020-10-30

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume

54

Issue

22

Start page

14343

End page

14351

Subjects

Arsenic methylation

•

Arsenic detoxification

•

Arsenite efflux

•

Acr3 enzyme

•

Microbial warfare

•

Arsenical antibiotics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

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RelationURL/DOI

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https://infoscience.epfl.ch/record/306178
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/173017
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