Cadmium and Proton Adsorption onto a Halophilic Archaeal Species: The Role of Cell Envelope Sulfhydryl Sites

2020 
Abstract The adsorption of metal onto archaea could affect metal behavior and bioavailability in hypersaline environments where archaea represent the dominant life form. However, the mechanism and thermodynamics of metal adsorption onto halophilic archaea are not well understood. In this study, Cd adsorption experiments and potentiometric titrations were conducted to model metal adsorption by the halophilic archaeon Halobacterium sp.. Cd adsorption onto the archaeal cells exhibits slow adsorption kinetics, taking 8 h to reach steady-state. The extent of Cd adsorption depends strongly on pCH+ and Cd loading. Desorption of Cd is even slower than adsorption, but exposure of the Cd-adsorbed biomass to high concentrations of cysteine promotes desorption and demonstrates that the distribution of Cd is controlled by reversible adsorption reactions, likely involving sulfhydryl binding of Cd on the cell surface. We conducted potentiometric titration experiments with and without sulfhydryl site blocking to yield a total sulfhydryl site concentration of 91 ± 28 μmol/g within the archaeal cell envelope. Using a combination of the X-ray absorption fine structure analysis results from Showalter et al. (2016) and the Cd adsorption measurements and titration data from this study, we construct a surface complexation model of the Cd adsorption behavior. Because the Cd adsorption behavior is likely similar to that of a range of chalcophilic micronutrients, the importance of Cd-sulfhydryl binding suggests that the production of high affinity sulfhydryl binding sites by the archaea may represent an adaptive strategy for halophiles to obtain metal nutrients in environments in which aqueous metal-chloride complexation dominates the speciation for many metals.
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