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Article
Contrasting Effects of Dissolved Organic Matter on Mercury Methylation by G. sulfurreducens PCA and D. desulfuricans ND132 Linduo Zhao, Hongmei Chen, Xia Lu, Hui Lin, Geoff A. Christensen, Eric M. Pierce, and Baohua Gu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b02518 • Publication Date (Web): 14 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 15, 2017
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Environmental Science & Technology
Contrasting Effects of Dissolved Organic Matter on Mercury Methylation by G. sulfurreducens PCA and D. desulfuricans ND132
1 2 3
Linduo Zhao,† Hongmei Chen,† Xia Lu,† Hui Lin,† Geoff A. Christensen,‡ Eric M. Pierce,† and Baohua Gu†,*
4 5 6 7 8 9
†
Environmental Sciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, United States
‡
Biosciences Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, United States
10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
*
Corresponding Author: Email:
[email protected]; Phone: (865)-574-7286; Fax: (865)-576-8543
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Abstract Natural dissolved organic matter (DOM) affects mercury (Hg) redox reactions and
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anaerobic microbial Hg methylation in the environment. Several studies have shown that DOM
25
can enhance Hg methylation, especially under sulfidic conditions, whereas others show that
26
DOM inhibits Hg methylation due to strong Hg-DOM complexation. In this study, we
27
investigated and compared the effects of DOM on Hg methylation by an iron-reducing bacterium
28
Geobacter sulfurreducens PCA and a sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans
29
ND132 under non-sulfidic conditions. The methylation experiment was performed with washed
30
cells either in the absence or presence of DOM or glutathione, both of which form strong
31
complexes with Hg via thiol-functional groups. DOM was found to greatly inhibit Hg
32
methylation by G. Sulfurreducens PCA but enhance Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132
33
cells with increasing DOM concentration. These strain-dependent opposing effects of DOM were
34
also observed with glutathione, suggesting that thiols in DOM likely played an essential role in
35
affecting microbial Hg uptake and methylation. Additionally, DOM and glutathione decreased
36
Hg sorption by G. sulfurreducens PCA, but not by D. desulfuricans ND132 cells, demonstrating
37
that ND132 has a higher affinity to sorb or take up Hg than the PCA strain. These observations
38
indicate that DOM effects on Hg methylation are bacterial strain specific, depend on the
39
DOM:Hg ratio or site-specific conditions, and may thus offer new insights into the role of DOM
40
in methylmercury production in the environment.
41
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Introduction
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Microbial methylation, which converts inorganic mercury (IHg) to neurotoxic
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methylmercury (MeHg), is carried out by a group of anaerobic microorganisms possessing the
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key gene cluster hgcAB.1-4 A wide range of environmental factors, including organic and
46
inorganic complexing ligands, pH, redox potential, and sulfidic versus non-sulfidic conditions,
47
are known to affect the methylation process because of their influences on Hg chemical
48
speciation and thus its bioavailability.5-12 Natural dissolved organic matter (DOM) exists
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ubiquitously in aquatic environments and represents a heterogeneous mixture of thousands of
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organic compounds derived from both allochthonous and autochthonous sources.10, 13-15 In
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freshwater systems, Hg is typically bound to DOM due to its strong binding affinity with the
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thiol (–SH) functional groups in DOM.14, 16-20 DOM is also known to affect Hg redox reactions
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and complexation,16-23 and thus influence microbial Hg uptake and methylation in natural water
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and sediments.5, 6, 8-12 However, studies of DOM effects on microbial Hg methylation to date have been
55 56
inconsistent. Both negative and positive correlations have been observed between DOM
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concentration and Hg methylation and bioavailability.8, 24-31 On the one hand, DOM has been
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found to inhibit microbial Hg methylation as a result of decreases in Hg bioavailability caused by
59
the formation of strong Hg-DOM complexes.8, 25 Conversely, several studies showed that Hg
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methylation and bioaccumulation increased with increasing DOM concentrations in water.10-12, 29-
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33
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sulfidic conditions DOM substantially enhances Hg methylation over a wide range of Hg:DOM
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ratios.11, 12, 33 This observation was explained by the role of DOM in inhibiting aggregation of
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HgS nanoparticles, making them bioavailable to methylating bacteria under sulfidic conditions.
In particular, pure culture studies with sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) have shown that under
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High molecular weight and aromatic DOM isolates are thought to be more effective than low
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molecular weight and low aromatic DOM isolates at inhibiting HgS nanoparticles from
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aggregation, thereby enhancing Hg methylation.12, 33
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Under non-sulfidic conditions, recent studies also indicate that phytoplankton-derived
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organic compounds or low molecular weight thiols from natural lake periphytic biofilms enhance
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Hg methylation.10, 34 This DOM-enhanced Hg uptake and methylation have been attributed to
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possibly increased Hg bioavailability via Hg-DOM complexation or stimulated microbial activity
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due to increased organic carbon as a nutrient in the system. Interestingly, however, in a
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laboratory incubation study with water samples from the Western Canadian Arctic, DOM was
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found to increase Hg methylation at relatively low DOM but inhibited at high DOM
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concentrations.30 Hurley et al. reported no correlation between DOM and Hg methylation in the
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Florida Everglades.35 Similarly, in a study of the biogeochemical factors affecting Hg
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methylation rate in soils, DOM alone was found to be weakly correlated to Hg methylation rates,
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but the DOM/Hg ratio was a more important factor affecting Hg methylation.36
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The inconsistent results observed on the role of DOM on microbial methylation suggest
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that factors other than DOM concentration or characteristics may be responsible. We hypothesize
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that DOM effects on Hg methylation could be site-specific and depend on local biogeochemical
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conditions such as microbial community composition, and the DOM concentration or DOM/Hg
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ratio. For example, D. desulfuricans ND132 is a SRB isolated from marine estuarine
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environments,4, 12, 37 whereas G. Sulfurreducens PCA is an iron (Fe)-reducing bacterium (FeRB)
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commonly found in freshwater sediments.4, 5, 38, 39 Both strains are known Hg methylators.
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However, the presence of low molecular weight organic thiols (e.g., cysteine and glutathione)
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has been shown to enhance Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132, but only selected thiols 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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(e.g., cysteine) enhance Hg methylation by G. Sulfurreducens PCA cells.37 The present study
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was therefore carried out to: (1) examine the effect(s) of DOM concentrations or DOM:Hg ratios
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on Hg methylation by two methylating bacteria, a FeRB G. Sulfurreducens PCA and a SRB D.
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desulfuricans ND132 in non-sulfidic conditions; and (2) compare the effects of DOM and
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glutathione on Hg methylation and species distributions as influenced by complex interactions
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between Hg and DOM, glutathione, and bacterial cells, and the mechanisms of strain-specific
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effects on Hg-DOM interactions and ultimately Hg methylation.
95 96
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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DOM samples and isolation
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Two organic matter isolates were used in this study. The first, EFPC-DOM, was isolated
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from East Fork Poplar Creek (EFPC) water in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, United States, following
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the method of Dittmar et al.40 Briefly, the creek water was collected in a pre-cleaned 20-L
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polypropylene carboy in the field, filtered through 1-µm filters in the laboratory, and then
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acidified to pH 2 prior to solid-phase extraction with polystyrene divinylbenzene (PPL)
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cartridges (Bond Elut, Agilent Technology). The PPL-sorbed DOM was eluted with pure
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methanol into combusted clean glass vials, and the eluent was subsequently placed in a vacuum
105
oven (25 °C) to evaporate methanol and thus concentrate the DOM. The concentrated DOM was
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dissolved in ultrapure water and kept frozen prior to freeze-drying. The final freeze-dried DOM
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was stored in a desiccator in the dark. The second isolate, FRC-HA, was obtained from a
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background soil at the Integrated Field Research Center (FRC) in Oak Ridge, and its isolation
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and purification procedures have been described elsewhere.19, 23 These two DOM isolates were
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used to represent both aquatic (EFPC-DOM) and terrestrial (FRC-HA) DOM substances. Their
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specific UV absorptivity (SUVA) and elemental compositions were given in SI Table S1. As
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expected, FRC-HA shows a higher SUVA254 (5.2) or aromaticity but a lower sulfur (0.43% w/w)
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content than those of aquatic EFPC-DOM (SUVA254 3.1; S 1.93%).
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Bacterial culture conditions
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Geobacter Sulfurreducens PCA (ATCC 51573) was cultured anaerobically at 30 °C in
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nutrient broth basal salts (NB) containing 40 mM fumarate and 20 mM acetate as the respective
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electron acceptor and donor, whereas Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ND132 was cultured in a
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modified MOY medium containing 40 mM fumarate and 40 mM pyruvate (see Table S2 for
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additional details).3, 41, 42 No sulfate or thiol compounds were added to the culture to minimize
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potential production of sulfide (or HgS formation) in the system. Cells were harvested at the late
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exponential growth phase by centrifugation (1500 g for 10 min at 23 °C), and washed three times
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by repeated centrifugation and resuspension with a deoxygenated phosphate-buffered saline
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(PBS), consisting of 0.14 M NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 10 mM Na2HPO4, and 2 mM KH2PO4 at pH 7.4.
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Cell density (OD) was measured at 600 nm and validated by direct cell counting with a
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hemocytometer under a microscope, as previous described.5, 42 The deoxygenated PBS was used
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throughout the Hg methylation assays. Additional details regarding PBS preparation and cell
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culture conditions are given elsewhere.5, 7, 42
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Hg methylation assays
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All Hg methylation assays were conducted in sealed amber glass vials (4 mL) in an
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anaerobic chamber (Coy Lab Products, Grass Lake, MI) containing a mixture of ~98% N2 and
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2% H2. The concentrated DOM solution (100 mg C/L or 8.33 mM C) was prepared in
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deoxygenated water, filtered through a 0.2-µm filter, and stored in a refrigerator until use. A
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series of cell suspensions was prepared in deoxygenated PBS, in which DOM, fumarate, acetate 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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or pyruvate, and cells were added at desired concentrations. The Hg solution was also prepared
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in deoxygenated PBS from a concentrated stock (50 µM HgCl2 in 1% HCl), and then
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immediately mixed with the cell suspension (0.5 mL each) to commence the Hg-cell interactions
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at the room temperature (~ 23°C). All vials were immediately sealed with PTFE-lined silicone
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screw caps and placed on a rotary shaker in the anaerobic chamber in the dark. The final cell
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density was 108 cells/mL, and the added Hg concentration was 25 nM, or otherwise specified.
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The final DOM concentration varied from 0 to 5 mg C/L, whereas acetate and fumarate (for
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PCA), and pyruvate and fumarate (for ND132) were added at 1 mM each at the beginning of the
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assay. Additional experiments were performed to evaluate the effects of DOM:Hg ratios on Hg
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methylation in the same manner, in which the Hg concentration was kept at 5 nM, and EFPC-
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DOM concentrations varied from 0 to 24 mg C/L.
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At 4, 24, and 144 h time points, a set of 4 sample vials (at each DOM concentration) was
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taken out of the anaerobic chamber and analyzed for Hg and MeHg species distributions on the
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cells and in solution. First, all samples were immediately analyzed for purgeable elemental Hg(0)
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by purging dissolved gaseous Hg(0) from cell suspension with ultrapure N2 into a Hg(0) analyzer
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Lumex RA-915+ (Ohio Lumex, detection limit ~2.5 ×10-4 nM), as described previously.38,
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Second, two purged samples were filtered through 0.2-µm syringe filters (13 mm, Pall Gelman
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Acrodisc) to remove cells, and the filtrate was used for analyses of the nonpurgeable soluble Hg
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(Hgsol) and soluble MeHg (MeHgsol). An aliquot from the other two purged samples (without
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filtration) was analyzed for total nonpurgeable Hg (HgNP) and total MeHg (MeHgTotal). All
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purged samples (with and without filtration) were preserved in HCl (0.5% v/v) at 4°C until
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analysis. An aliquot (0.05–0.4 mL, depending on concentrations) was used for MeHg analysis.
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The remaining aliquot was oxidized overnight in BrCl (5%, v/v) at 4°C and then analyzed for
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Hgsol or HgNP [including both MeHg and IHg] via SnCl2 reduction, gold-trap amalgamation, and
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detection with the Lumex Hg(0) analyzer. A modified EPA Method 1630 was used for MeHg
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analysis, in which isotope dilution with enriched Me200Hg was used as an internal standard, and
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an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) (Elan-DRCe, Perkin-Elmer, Inc.,
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Shelton, CT) used to separate the various Hg isotopes to determine MeHg concentrations, as
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previously described.38,
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detection limit was about 3×10-5 nM MeHg. Total Hg (HgT) was calculated by the sum of the
164
Hg(0) and HgNP. The cell-associated nonpurgeable Hg (Hgcell) was determined by subtracting
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Hgsol from HgNP, and similarly for the cell-associated MeHg (MeHgcell = MeHgTotal–MeHgsol).
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The soluble and cell-associated inorganic Hg (IHgsol or IHgcell) were calculated by the difference
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between nonpurgeable Hg and MeHg (i.e., IHgsol=Hgsol–MeHgsol and IHgcell=Hgcell–MeHgcell).
43
The recovery of spiked MeHg standards was 100±10%, and the
168 169
RESULTS
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Effect of DOM on Hg methylation is bacterial strain specific
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The effect of EFPC-DOM on Hg methylation was compared between two strains: G.
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sulfurreducens PCA and D. desulfuricans ND132 at DOM concentrations of 0–5 mg C/L, typical
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levels found in the aquatic environment. For G. sulfurreducens PCA, MeHg production
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decreased consistently with increasing DOM concentration (Figure 1a), although the amount of
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MeHg produced increased with incubation time, as expected.5, 42, 44 Without DOM, PCA cells
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produced 0.6±0.1, 1.1±0.0, and 1.3±0.2 nM MeHg at 4, 24, and 144 h, respectively, which
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agreed well with the amount of MeHg produced under similar conditions, as previously
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reported.5, 42, 44 A good mass balance was obtained (Figure 1). However, with the addition of
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only 1 mg C/L EFPC-DOM, MeHg production decreased to 0.1±0.0, 0.3±0.1, and 0.3±0.1 nM at 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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4, 24, and 144 h, respectively, corresponding to a 3–6 fold decrease in MeHg production among
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the time points. Further, MeHg production was essentially ceased in the presence of 5 mg C/L
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EFPC-DOM, indicating its strong inhibitory effects. To further validate this observation, we
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performed similar experiments with a terrestrial DOM isolate, FRC-HA, and observed nearly
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identical trends as EFPC-DOM (SI Figure S1). These observations indicate that DOM inhibits
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Hg methylation by G. sulfurreducens PCA.
(a) G. sulfurreducens PCA
(b) D. desulfuricans ND132
25
25 15 4h 24 h 144 h
0.5
5
0.0
0 0
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10
1.0
1
2
3
4
5
0
1
2
3
4
MeHg (nM)
MeHg (nM)
1.5
5
EFPC-DOM (mg C/L)
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Figure 1. Effects of EFPC-DOM on methylmercury (MeHg) production by washed cells (108
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cells/mL) of (a) G. sulfurreducens PCA and (b) D. desulfuricans ND132 in deoxygenated PBS at
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4, 24, and 144 h (solid symbols). Open symbols represent corresponding total Hg concentrations
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for mass balance in the system. The initial added Hg (as HgCl2) concentration was 25 nM. Data
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points represent an average of 2 to 3 independent batch experiments, and error bars represent one
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standard deviation from 4–6 replicate MeHg assays.
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Conversely, for D. desulfuricans ND132, Hg methylation increased, rather than
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decreased, with increasing EFPC-DOM concentrations (Figure 1b). In the DOM-free controls,
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cells alone produced 0.8±0.1, 4.4±0.8, 8.4±1.4 nM MeHg at 4, 24, and 144 h, respectively, which
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are consistent with previously reported values.7, 43 With the addition of 5 mg C/L EFPC-DOM,
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MeHg production increased to 2.5±0.5, 11.2±1.6, and 14.0±0.7 nM at 4, 24, and 144 h,
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respectively, or about 2–3 fold relative to the DOM-free controls. Although lower, this DOM
200
enhanced Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132 is consistent with those observed under
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sulfidic conditions (with added sulfide concentrations of 3–10 µM), in which different DOM
202
isolates enhanced MeHg production by 2–38 fold.12, 33 Although no sulfide or sulfate was added
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in our methylation assays, small amounts of sulfide were produced over time by SRB D.
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desulfuricans ND132, but not by G. sulfurreducens PCA cells (SI Figure S2). With ND132 cells,
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sulfide concentrations increased from about 0 (or below detection limit) at 1 h up to 3.5 µM at
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144 h, either in the absence (PBS only) or presence of DOM or glutathione. However, the
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excreted sulfide by ND132 cells was not anticipated to significantly impact the speciation of Hg
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in solution because majority (>95%) of the added Hg(II) became associated with the cells in < 1
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h, a time point when the sulfide concentration was below detection (see SI Figure S3, and
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Section below for additional details). Therefore, our results (Figure 1) demonstrate that Hg-
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methylating microorganisms can have distinct (and even opposite) methylation potential in
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response to DOM.
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DOM effects on Hg methylation were further examined at varying DOM:Hg ratios
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(expressed as C:Hg molar ratios) in the presence of D. desulfuricans ND132 (Figure 2), but not
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G. sulfurreducens PCA because the presence of a small amount of EFPC-DOM (e.g., 2.5 mg C/L 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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C) nearly stalled MeHg production by PCA cells (Figure 1a). The experiment was performed at a
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fixed low Hg concentration (5 nM) so that the absolute MeHg production was lower than that in
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the presence of 25 nM Hg (Figure 1b). The DOM concentration varied from 0.6 to 24 mg C/L
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(0.05 to 2 mM C) to give C:Hg ratios from 0.1 to 4×105, as observed in some Hg-contaminated
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systems.19 Results show that Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132 increased substantially
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at low C:Hg ratio (0.1×105) and plateau with increasing C:Hg ratios (Figure 2). For all time
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points MeHg production increased initially (at C:Hg 0.1 to 1×105) with increasing EFPC-DOM
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compared to the no DOM control (i.e., C:Hg ratio = 0). The greatest MeHg production increase
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was between 0 and 0.1×105 C:Hg ratios. However, beyond this and up to 4×105 C:Hg ratio,
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MeHg production remained unchanged or slightly decreased. This observation is attributed to
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increased competition between EFPC-DOM and D. desulfuricans ND132 cells for Hg in
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solution. Since Hg(II) is known to strongly bind with thiols,16-18, 21 increasing DOM
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concentration would thus result in changes in Hg partitioning and distribution among different
229
functional groups on DOM (e.g., carboxyl versus thiolate functional groups).20, 45 Therefore, at
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the highest C:Hg ratio of 4×105, we observed a small decrease in MeHg production (at 24 and
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144 h), likely resulting from competitive ligand exchange or complexation of Hg to the strongest
232
available binding sites at increasing DOM concentrations.20
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234
Figure 2. Effects of EFPC-DOM:Hg ratios (expressed as C:Hg molar ratios) on methylmercury
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(MeHg) production by washed cells of D. desulfuricans ND132 (108 cells/mL) in PBS at 4, 24,
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and 144 h. The initial added Hg(II) concentration was fixed at 5 nM. Error bars represent one
237
standard deviation.
238 239 240
DOM effects on Hg sorption and species distribution To better understand the role that DOM has on Hg methylation by anaerobic
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microorganisms we examined the influence of EFPC-DOM on Hg species distribution during
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methylation assays with G. sulfurreducens PCA and with D. desulfuricans ND132. The Hg
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species examined include: MeHg, elemental Hg [Hg(0)], the cell-associated inorganic Hg
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(IHgcell) (including both the sorbed and internalized Hg), and the soluble inorganic Hg (IHgsol)
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(Figure 3). Hg(II) reduction to Hg(0) was observed only with G. sulfurreducens PCA cells
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(Figure 3a), but not D. desulfuricans ND132 (Figure 3b), as previously reported.5, 42, 44 At 4 h,
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about 64% of the added Hg (16 nM) was reduced to Hg(0) by G. sulfurreducens PCA in the
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absence of EFPC-DOM, and the reduction was primarily attributed to Hg reactions with cell
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outer-membrane cytochromes.5, 46 The reduction increased slightly (up to ~70%) with the
250
addition of 0.1 and 0.5 mg C/L in 4 h but decreased consistently with further increase in DOM
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concentrations (~18% at 5 mg C/L). This observation is explained by the fact that DOM itself
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can reduce Hg(II) at relatively low concentrations but inhibit Hg(II) reduction or oxidize Hg(0)
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at relatively high DOM concentrations, as previously described.21, 23, 47 The reduction of Hg(II) is
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primarily attributed to semiquinone moieties present in relatively large quantities in DOM,
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whereas inhibited Hg(II) reduction or the re-oxidation of Hg(0) results from strong binding
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between Hg and thiols on DOM, which are less abundant than the semiquinone moiety.21, 23 This
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phenomenon is well illustrated in an abiotic control experiment, in which EFPC-DOM alone
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reduced Hg(II) at relatively low DOM (< 2.5 mg C/L) but the reduction decreased or inhibited at
259
increasing DOM concentrations (SI Figure S4). G. sulfurreducens PCA cells also contributed to
260
the oxidation of Hg(0) due to the presence of thiolate functional groups on the cells surface.5, 42,
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48
262
DOM (Figure 3a).
263
This is evidenced by decreased Hg(0) concentrations from 24 to 144 h for samples without
Importantly, we found that the IHgsol increased consistently from ~ 4% to 34% (at 4 h)
264
with increasing EFPC-DOM concentrations from 0 to 5 mg C/L, but decreased slightly with
265
incubation time due to increased sorption or uptake of Hg (IHgcell) by G. sulfurreducens PCA
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cells (Figure 3a). At 144 h, IHgsol increased from ~3% to 16% when the DOM concentration
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increased from 0 to 5 mg C/L. These results indicate that DOM competitively binds with Hg in 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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solution since DOM also forms strong complexes with Hg.16-18, 20 Consequently, DOM appears
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to negatively impact MeHg production by decreasing bioavailable Hg for methylation by G.
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sulfurreducens PCA cells. However, we note that cell sorption of Hg is only the first step for Hg
271
uptake and methylation; the sorbed IHg is not necessarily all available for methylation. Previous
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studies have shown that a large percentage of the IHgcell is in fact unavailable for methylation
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due to strong cellular binding with Hg.7
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In contrast to that observed with G. sulfurreducens PCA, a large percentage of the Hg
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(>94%) was associated with D. desulfuricans ND132 cells in 4 h, leaving < 5% of the Hg in
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solution (Figure 3b). Here we do not distinguish between Hg sorption and uptake, although our
277
studies indicate that most of the cell-associated IHg was rapidly internalized in ND132 cells (SI
278
Figure S3).7 At 24 h, the IHgcell decreased, and MeHg production increased, as expected due to
279
methylation, since MeHg tends to be mostly exported rapidly from ND132 cells.43, 49, 50 With
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further increasing time (144 h), nearly 100% of the IHg was associated with or taken up by the
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cells (MeHg excluded), regardless the presence or absence of DOM (up to 5 mg C/L or C:Hg
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ratio of 1.7×104). These results indicate that D. desulfuricans ND132 cells have a much higher
283
affinity or capacity to sorb and subsequently methylate Hg than G. sulfurreducens PCA cells in
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the presence of DOM (Figure 3). This result is consistent with previous findings that D.
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desulfuricans ND132 is a stronger Hg methylator than G. sulfurreducens PCA under our
286
experimental conditions.37, 43 Only at the highest C:Hg ratio (4×105), a small decrease in MeHg
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production was noted after 144 h (Figure 2), which may be attributed to competition between
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DOM and ND132 cells for binding with Hg.
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4h
100
24 h
144 h
Hg species (% of HgT)
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60
(a)
40
IHgSol Hg(0) MeHg IHgCell
20
0
0 0.1 0.5
1
2.5 5
0 0.1 0.5
1
2.5 5
0 0.1 0.5
1
2.5 5
EFPC-DOM (mg C/L)
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4h
100
24 h
144 h
Hg species (% of HgT)
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60
(b)
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IHgSol Hg(0) MeHg IHgCell
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0
0 0.1 0.5
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1
2.5 5
0 0.1 0.5
1
2.5 5
0 0.1 0.5
1
2.5 5
EFPC-DOM (mg C/L)
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Figure 3. Effects of EFPC-DOM on mercury (Hg) species distributions during Hg methylation
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assays with washed cells of (a) G. sulfurreducens PCA and (b) D. desulfuricans ND132 in
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deoxygenated PBS at 4, 24, and 144 h. The initial added Hg (as HgCl2) concentration was 25
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nM, and cell concentration was 108 cells/mL. Hg species include: MeHg, elemental Hg (Hg(0)),
295
cell-associated inorganic Hg (IHgcell), and soluble inorganic Hg (IHgsol).
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Comparisons between glutathione and DOM on Hg methylation and species distribution As a soft metal, Hg preferentially binds to soft ligands such as thiols or thiolate functional
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groups on DOM,45 and affect Hg uptake and methylation by microorganisms.5, 37, 38, 44 45 Many
299
low-molecular-weight thiol compounds (e.g., cysteine, glutathione, etc.) are found to enhance Hg
300
methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132, but only a few of them (e.g., cysteine) enhance Hg
301
methylation while others (e.g., glutathione) inhibit methylation by G. sulfurreducens PCA.5, 37, 44
302
While the exact mechanism of thiol-enhanced or inhibited Hg methylation remains elusive, we
303
compared the effect of glutathione with DOM on Hg methylation and species distribution during
304
incubation with D. desulfuricans ND132 and G. sulfurreducens PCA. Interestingly, results with
305
glutathione almost mirrored those in the presence of EFPC-DOM (Figure 4), suggesting a
306
common structure/mechanism between glutathione and EFPC-DOM affecting Hg-methylation
307
by these microorganisms. Addition of glutathione greatly decreased Hg methylation by G.
308
sulfurreducens PCA and increased soluble Hg concentrations, particularly within the first 24 h
309
(Figure 4a,b). With the addition of only 0.1 µM glutathione, MeHg production decreased by
310
91%, 77%, and 45% at 4, 24, and 144 h, respectively. Hg methylation was nearly stalled in the
311
presence of 1 µM glutathione at 4 and 24 h, and this inhibition recovered slightly with a longer
312
incubation time at 144 h (Figure 4a).
313
Similar to that observed with EFPC-DOM, Hg(II) reduction by PCA cells also decreased
314
but the IHgsol concentration increased with increasing glutathione concentrations (Figure 4b).
315
The reduction was inhibited with the addition of glutathione because of a decrease in redox
316
potential of the Hg(II)-glutathione complexes, which make it difficult for PCA cells to reduce
317
Hg(II).5, 21, 51 We therefore observed a progressive decrease in Hg(0) but an increase in IHgsol
318
concentrations at 4 h. A large percentage of the IHg (~ 64%) was in solution with the addition of 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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only 0.05 µM glutathione at 4 h, and it increased to ~ 92% in the presence of 1 µM glutathione
320
(Figure 4b), indicating that glutathione strongly competes with G. sulfurreducens PCA cells for
321
Hg binding. With increasing reaction time (24 h), we found a slightly increased Hg(II) reduction
322
(at 0.05 µM glutathione) but greatly increased sorption (IHgcell), which appeared to reach a
323
maximum at glutathione concentrations around 0.05 to 0.1 µM. This observation could be
324
explained by cell competition for Hg(II) sorption (as the IHgsol increased) and/or concurrent Hg
325
reactions in the system (i.e., reduction and sorption or uptake by cells, and complexation and
326
oxidation by glutathione), as reported previously.5, 42, 47 Over time (at 144 h), IHgsol further
327
decreased and IHgcell increased, resulting in a large percentage of IHg associated with cells at the
328
glutathione concentration below 1 µM. At the highest glutathione concentration (50 µM),
329
however, a significant portion of IHg (~58%) remained in solution even after 144 h because of
330
the formation of strong Hg-glutathione complexes. These observations demonstrate that, like
331
EFPC-DOM, glutathione greatly inhibits Hg availability for methylation by G. sulfurreducens
332
PCA cells.
333
In contrast to that observed with G. sulfurreducens PCA, glutathione substantially
334
increased Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132 (Figure 4c), similar to its response to
335
EFPC-DOM (Figure 1b). MeHg production increased by about 2–3 fold across the time points,
336
as glutathione increased from 0 to 50 µM. Similarly as observed with EFPC-DOM (Figure 3b),
337
most of the added Hg rapidly became cell-associated, leaving only a small percentage of the IHg
338
in solution (Figure 4d). However, compared to that in the presence of EFPC-DOM (Figure 3b),
339
slightly more IHg was found in the solution phase with glutathione: ~35% at 4 h and ~10% at
340
144 h at the glutathione concentration of 100 µM. These results support the conclusion that D.
341
desulfuricans ND132 cells have a stronger binding affinity for Hg than G. sulfurreducens PCA 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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342
under the same cell density or experimental conditions, and the presence of thiol ligands such as
343
glutathione enhances Hg methylation by ND132 cells.
G. sulfurreducens PCA
D. desulfuricans ND132 25
25
1.5
(c)
4h 24 h 144 h
1.0
10
5
0.5
0.0
0 0.0
0.1
15
30
45
0
20
Glutathione (µ µM) (4 h)
(24 h)
40
60
80
100
Glutathione (µ µM) (144 h)
(4 h)
(24 h)
(144 h)
100
80
80
(b)
(d)
60
60
40
40
20
IHgSol
IHgSol
Hg(0) MeHg IHgCell
Hg(0) MeHg IHgCell
20
Hg species (% of HgT)
Hg species (% of HgT)
100
0
0 0 0.05 0.1 1
344
MeHg (nM)
MeHg (nM)
15
(a)
50
0 0.05 0.1 1
50
0 0.05 0.1 1
0
50
Glutathione (µ µM)
1 10 50 100 0
1 10 50 100
0
1 10 50 100
Glutathione (µ µM)
345 346 347
Figure 4. Effects of glutathione on methylmercury (MeHg) production and Hg species
348
distributions during methylation assays by washed cells of G. sulfurreducens PCA (a, b) and D.
349
desulfuricans ND132 (c, d) in PBS at 4, 24, and 144 h. Open symbols represent corresponding
350
total Hg concentrations for mass balance in the system. The initial added Hg(II) (as HgCl2)
351
concentration was 25 nM, and cell concentration was 108 cells/mL. Hg species include: MeHg,
352
elemental Hg [Hg(0)], cell-associated inorganic Hg (IHgcell), and soluble inorganic Hg (IHgsol).
353
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354 355
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DISCUSSION This study demonstrates that the effect(s) of DOM on Hg methylation are bacterial strain
356
specific and dependent on the EFPC-DOM/glutathione:Hg ratio. EFPC-DOM or glutathione
357
decreases MeHg production by the FeRB G. sulfurreducens PCA but increases Hg methylation
358
by the SRB D. desulfuricans ND132. Two additional trends were seen when comparing the two
359
strains that may elucidate these observations. (1) For G. sulfurreducens PCA as compared to D.
360
Desulfuricans ND132, Hg appears to be less bioavailable for methylation (i.e., as Hg(0) and
361
IHgsol) in the presence of EFPC-DOM or glutathione. Moreover, for D. desulfuricans ND132,
362
Hg(0) and IHgsol are almost non-existent in the presence or absence of EFPC-DOM or
363
glutathione, with ~90% of the Hg as IHgcell (i.e., bound to or taken up by the cells) but only ~30–
364
50% for G. sulfurreducens PCA. (2) For G. sulfurreducens PCA, Hg(0) decreases while relative
365
IHgsol increases with increasing EFPC-DOM or glutathione. This observation is explained by Hg
366
complexation with EFPC-DOM or glutathione, which decreases Hg availability to the cells and
367
inhibits Hg(II) reduction to Hg(0).21, 23, 47 D. desulfuricans ND132 is more capable than G.
368
sulfurreducens PCA of sorbing Hg (i.e., IHgcell) for Hg methylation, and this difference may
369
partially explain the greater extent of Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132 as compared to
370
G. sulfurreducens PCA. Although the exact cause of the observed difference is presently
371
unknown at the genomic level, which is beyond the scope of the current work, surface thiol
372
functional groups on cells may be responsible. This argument is supported by the measured thiol
373
content on ND132 cells [1.9 (±0.2)×107 thiols/cell] being nearly three orders of magnitude
374
higher than that on PCA cells [2.2 (±0.6)×104 thiols/cell] (SI Figure S5), which is consistent with
375
that reported by Wang et al.52. The bacteria thus compete for Hg with EFPC-DOM or glutathione
376
in solution, and genomic differences (e.g., transcript and protein abundance) between the two
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377
methylating strains may lead to different responses. Recent studies further indicate that thiols on
378
bacterial cell envelopes can also differ significantly, depending on bacterial community, nutrient
379
availability and concentrations.53
380
The DOM-enhanced Hg methylation by D. desulfuricans ND132 (this study) is similar to
381
that observed previously under sulfidic conditions,11, 12, 33 albeit to a lower extent. This
382
enhancement effect was previously attributed to DOM-inhibited HgS precipitation or
383
aggregation into larger, more crystalline, less bioavailable Hg forms in the presence of sulfide.12
384
It was also speculated that large size and high degree of aromaticity of DOM molecules may be
385
important factors that promote Hg methylation. Other studies suggested that DOM enhanced Hg
386
methylation by acting as an electron acceptor to stimulate microbial growth or providing shuttle
387
molecules to facilitate the Hg uptake.11, 30 Our results indicate that some low-molecular weight
388
thiols in DOM (akin to glutathione) likely played a crucial role in affecting Hg bioavailability
389
and thus methylation because (1) Hg preferentially binds with thiol compounds,16, 45, 47 and (2)
390
similar inhibitory or enhancement effects of DOM and glutathione were observed with both G.
391
sulfurreducens PCA and D. desulfuricans ND132 cells, respectively (Figures 1 and 4). Although
392
the molecular structure and identity of these thiol compounds in DOM are unknown due to
393
highly complex, heterogeneous nature of DOM, high-resolution mass spectrometric (HR-MS)
394
analysis showed the presence of a variety of sulfur-containing compounds in EFPC-DOM (SI
395
Figure S6, Table S3). This result is supported by recent studies which identified many low-
396
molecular-weight thiol compounds (e.g., glutathione, thioglycolic acid, cysteine, etc.) in
397
periphyton or phytoplankton-derived DOM.10, 34 Therefore, the presence of these different thiol
398
compounds may either enhance or inhibit Hg sorption and methylation by different methylating
399
microorganisms.5, 37, 44 Additionally, the enhancement or inhibitory effects may vary with thiol 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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400
concentrations or thiol:Hg ratios and reaction time due to complex interactions between cells and
401
thiols for Hg binding and uptake.5, 44
402
The present study thus offers additional insight into the role of DOM in Hg methylation
403
in the natural environment and may partially explain some inconsistent observations in the
404
literature.8, 24-30 DOM effects on Hg methylation could be site specific: DOM likely enhances Hg
405
methylation at such sites as estuarine ecosystems, where SRB may be dominant (such as the
406
isolated D. desulfuricans ND132).2, 49 However, DOM may inhibit Hg methylation due to its
407
strong binding with Hg in freshwater ecosystems where FeRB may dominate.54 Recent efforts
408
have been made to more easily identify Hg-methylating communities in the environment based
409
on the presence and abundance of the Hg-methylating gene pair, hgcAB,55 and to link global
410
protein expression (i.e. shotgun proteomics) to MeHg production.56, 57 Future studies with these
411
new techniques will likely lead to improved understanding of the quantitative relationships
412
between Hg methylation, community composition, and environmental factors (e.g., specific
413
DOM-thiol compounds, Hg/DOM ratios, and sulfide concentrations, etc.) in the aquatic
414
environment.
415 416
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
417
Supporting Information
418
Additional details about materials and methods and supplementary tables and figures mentioned
419
in the text. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
420 421 422
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423
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank Xiangping Yin for assistance with mercury and methylmercury analyses,
424 425
Rosalie Chu for FTICR-MS analysis, and Phuong Pham for EFPC-DOM isolation. This research
426
was sponsored by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER), Office of
427
Science, US Department of Energy (DOE) as part of the Mercury Science Focus Area at Oak
428
Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), which is managed by UT-Battelle LLC for the DOE under
429
contract DE-AC05-00OR22725. The FTICR-MS analysis was performed at Environmental
430
Molecular Science Laboratory (EMSL), a DOE Office of Science User Facility sponsored by
431
BER at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
432
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
433
434
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Environmental Science & Technology
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ACS Paragon Plus Environment