Publication | Open Access
Growth of Strain SES-3 with Arsenate and Other Diverse Electron Acceptors
218
Citations
30
References
1995
Year
Rare Earth MineralEngineeringCrystal Growth TechnologyBioelectrochemical ReactorExtremophileBioremediationMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyInorganic Electron AcceptorsEpitaxial GrowthMaterials ScienceMaterials EngineeringElectron AcceptorsElemental SulfurTransition Metal ChalcogenidesApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsBiotechnologyStrain Ses-3MicrobiologyMedicine
The selenate-respiring bacterial strain SES-3 was able to use a variety of inorganic electron acceptors to sustain growth. SES-3 grew with the reduction of arsenate to arsenite, Fe(III) to Fe(II), or thiosulfate to sulfide. It also grew in medium in which elemental sulfur, Mn(IV), nitrite, trimethylamine N-oxide, or fumarate was provided as an electron acceptor. Growth on oxygen was microaerophilic. There was no growth with arsenite or chromate. Washed suspensions of cells grown on selenate or nitrate had a constitutive ability to reduce arsenate but were unable to reduce arsenite. These results suggest that strain SES-3 may occupy a niche as an environmental opportunist by being able to take advantage of a diversity of electron acceptors.
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