Pseudomonas moraviensis subsp. stanleyae, a bacterial endophyte of hyperaccumulator Stanleya pinnata, is capable of efficient selenite reduction to elemental selenium under aerobic conditions

2015 
Aims: To identify bacteria with high selenium tolerance and reduction capacity for bioremediation of wastewater and nanoselenium particle production. Methods and Results: A bacterial endophyte was isolated from the selenium hyperaccumulator Stanleya pinnata (Brassicaceae) growing on seleniferous soils in Colorado, USA. Based on fatty acid methyl ester analysis and multi-locus sequence analysis (MLSA) using 16S rRNA, gyrB, rpoB and rpoD genes, the isolate was identified as a subspecies of Pseudomonas moraviensis (97·3% nucleotide identity) and named P. moraviensis stanleyae. The isolate exhibited extreme tolerance to SeO 3 2- (up to 120 mmol l -1 ) and SeO 4 2- (>150 mmol l -1 ). Selenium oxyanion removal from growth medium was measured by microchip capillary electrophoresis (detection limit 95 nmol l -1 for SeO 3 2- and 13 nmol l -1 for SeO 4 2- ). Within 48 h, P. moraviensis stanleyae aerobically reduced SeO 3 2- to red Se(0) from 10 mmol l -1 to below the detection limit (removal rate 0·27 mmol h -1 at 30°C); anaerobic SeO 3 2- removal was slower. No SeO 4 2- removal was observed. Pseudomonas moraviensis stanleyae stimulated the growth of crop species Brassica juncea by 70% with no significant effect on Se accumulation. Conclusions: Pseudomonas moraviensis stanleyae can tolerate extreme levels of selenate and selenite and can deplete high levels of selenite under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Significance and Impact of the Study: Pseudomonas moraviensis subsp. stanleyae may be useful for stimulating plant growth and for the treatment of Se-laden wastewater.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    40
    References
    38
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []