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Efficient Bacterial Inactivation by Transition Metal Catalyzed Auto-oxidation of Sulfite Long Chen, Min Tang, Chuan Chen, Mingguang Chen, Kai Luo, Jing Xu, Danna Zhou, and Feng Wu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b03705 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 9, 2017
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Efficient Bacterial Inactivation by Transition Metal
2
Catalyzed Auto-oxidation of Sulfite
3 4
Long Chen†, ‡, Min Tang‡, Chuan Chen†, Mingguang Chen†, Kai Luo§, Jing Xu‡, Danna
5
Zhou*∥, Feng Wu*‡, ⊥
6
†
7
Riverside, Riverside, California, 92521, USA
8
‡
9
School of Resources and Environmental Science, Wuhan University, Wuhan, 430079, P.
Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of California,
Hubei Key Lab of Biomass Resource Chemistry and Environmental Biotechnology,
10
R. China
11
§
12
MN 55455, USA
13
∥
14
430074, P. R. China
15
⊥
16
Institute of Eco-Environmental Science & Technology, Guangzhou, 510650, P. R. China
Masonic Cancer Center, University of Minnesota, 2231 6th Street SE, Minneapolis,
Faculty of Material Science and Chemistry, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan,
Guangdong Key Laboratory of Agro-Environmental Integrated Control, Guangdong
17 18 19
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Abstract
21
Disinfection is an indispensable process in wastewater treatment plants. New bacterial
22
inactivation technologies are of increasing interest and persistent demand. A category
23
of simple and efficient bactericidal systems have been established in this study, i.e., the
24
combination of divalent transition metal (Mn(II), Co(II), Fe(II), or Cu(II)) and sulfite. In
25
these systems, metal catalyzed auto-oxidation of sulfite was manifested to generate
26
reactive intermediary SO4•- that played the major role in Escherichia coli inactivation at
27
pH 5-8.5. Increasing concentrations of metal ion or sulfite, and lower pH, led to higher
28
bacterial deaths. Bacterial inactivation by Me(II)/Sulfite systems was demonstrated to be
29
a surface-bound oxidative damage process through destructing vital cellular
30
components, such as NADH and proteins. Additionally, the developed Me(II)/Sulfite
31
systems also potently killed other microbial pathogens, i.e. Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
32
Bacillus subtilis, and Cu(II)-/antibiotic-resistant E. coli. The efficacy of Me(II)/Sulfite in
33
treating real water samples was further tested with two sewages from a wastewater
34
treatment plant and a natural lake water body, and Cu(II)/Sulfite and Co(II)/Sulfite
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rapidly inactivated viable bacteria regardless of bacteria species and cell density,
36
therefore holding great promises for wastewater disinfection.
37 38 39 40 41
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Introduction
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Waterborne pathogenic microbes are of great concern to public health. Two methods
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are conventionally employed for bacteria removal, i.e. membrane filtration and bacterial
45
disinfection. Membrane filtration, taking advantage of the small pore size of synthetic
46
sheets, however, has the drawbacks of easy fouling, incomplete removal of tiny
47
organisms such as virus, and heavy demand of high pressure.1,2 Hence, a secondary
48
disinfection process is necessary for post-membrane treatment. Up to now, an
49
expanding range of disinfection processes or their combinations have been widely
50
applied. Traditionally used chlorine and ozone are powerful oxidants disinfecting
51
bacterial virulence, but the large-scale production, storage, and transportation are
52
challenging owing to their acute toxicities.3,4 Moreover, certain fraction of chlorination
53
byproducts are carcinogenic and their presences in potable water may secondarily
54
impair human health.5 Alternatively, advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) generating
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various oxidative radicals have been considered for bacterial inactivation purposes.
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Hydroxyl radical, HO•, derived from Fenton reaction has been verified to be potent in
57
killing bacteria via degrading vital cellular components.6,7 Another emerging strong
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radical, sulfate radical (SO4•-), has gained a lot of attractions as well due to its selective
59
degradation towards electron-rich recalcitrant contaminants.8,9 Recently, it has been
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reported that SO4•- is especially effective at bacterial/viral inactivation.10-13
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Previous SO4•- generating processes heavily relied on peroxymonosulfate (PMS) or
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persulfate (PS) through a one-step activation,8,9,14-16 while another intricate sulfite-
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associated radical chain reaction capable of deriving SO4•- has been largely ignored.
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Sulfite auto-oxidation catalyzed by transition metal ions with the presence of molecular
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oxygen is a key part of the sulfur cycle that mediates the transformation of S(IV) to
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S(VI).17-19 Briefly, at first SO3•- is generated after the instant decomposition of transient
67
complex between high-valence metal ion and sulfite via internal electron transfer, but it
68
rapidly
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disproportionally oxidizes sulfite producing SO4•- and sulfate anion (Table S1). The most
70
intriguing property of the sulfite oxidation process is that, plethoral SO4•- is effectively
71
generated. As a result, without exogenous competing substrates, SO4•- exclusively
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oxidizes parent sulfite, leading to the kinetically favored auto-oxidation of sulfite; on the
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other hand, the pool of total SO4•- is supposed to be re-assigned with the simultaneous
74
presences of sulfite and other heterologous substrates. We have thus utilized this
75
attractive
76
decontamination purpose.20-23 However, up to date, the application of sulfite-based
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AOPs for waterborne bacteria disinfection still remains unexplored, and there were
78
lacking
79
decontamination/disinfection.
80
In this study, we tested four divalent transition metals, i.e. Mn(II), Co(II), Fe(II), and
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Cu(II), catalyzed sulfite oxidation (denoted as Me(II)/Sulfite reactions) and therefore the
82
proliferation of SO4•- bactericide. The main aims of this work were to comparatively
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investigate the potential of Me(II)/Sulfite systems in killing various microbial pathogens
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and to reveal the associated bactericidal mechanisms. Our work has vital environmental
85
implications as both components of metal elements and sulfite are abundantly present
86
in various environmental media, and thus the associated cost is economically effective.
87
Materials and Methods
reacts
with
feature,
dissolved
and
oxygen
managed
comparisons
on
to
metal
to
drive
produce
SO4•-
catalyzed
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SO5•-.
Followingly,
generation
sulfite
for
SO5•-
wastewater
oxidation
for
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Materials
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Bacteria culture LB (Luria-Bertani) medium, disposable γ-ray sterilized 1-mL deep 96-
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well plates for bactericidal assays, and PBS buffer (pH 7.2) were purchased from
91
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. (Shanghai, PRC). Antibiotics (kanamycin, tetracyclin,
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ampicillin, and chloramphenicol) were bought from Aladdin Industrial Corporation
93
(Shanghai, PRC). Other chemicals including sodium sulfite (Na2SO3), manganese
94
chloride (MnCl2), cobalt chloride (CoCl2), ferrous sulfate (FeSO4), copper sulfate
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(CuSO4), tert-butanol (TBA), thiourea, and 2,2’-dipyridyl were obtained from Sinopharm
96
Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd. (Shanghai, PRC). Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) was from
97
Shanghai Boao Biochemical Technology (Shanghai, China). All chemicals were of
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reagent grade and used without further purification. Throughout the assays, Milli-Q
99
water was used (18 MΩ•cm, Millipore Co., USA). All chemicals used to assess cellular
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NADH
content
(ethanol,
3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium
101
bromide, phenazine ethosulfate, EDTA, and Bicine buffer) were bought from Sigma
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(Shanghai, China). HClO4 or NaOH was used to adjust the pH of PBS.
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Methods
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Cell culturing and bactericidal assay quantification. Single colony of Escherichia
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coli BL21(DE3) strain was cultured in 5 mL liquid LB medium at 37 °C and 250 rpm for
106
overnight incubation. 1% (50 µL) of saturated bacterial culture was then added into
107
fresh 5 mL LB medium, followed by constant shaking at 37 °C and 250 rpm for another
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2 h until the cells reached exponential phase (OD600 ~ 0.4-0.6). Cells were harvested
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by centrifugation at 3000 g for 3 min. Pelleted cells were then resuspended and washed
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with PBS buffer of desired pHs for three times to remove residual nutrients. The freshly
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obtained cells were immediately used without storage. Bactericidal assays were initiated
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by addition of metal ions and/or sodium sulfite at indicated concentrations. 200 µL liquid
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samples were taken at pre-determined intervals, 10-fold serially diluted with PBS (pH
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7.2), and eventually 5 µL liquid of each sample was dropped on LB-agar plates and
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incubated at 37 °C for 12 h. Bacterial survival rate was quantified by counting the CFU
116
(Colony Forming Unit) on the plates. Each assay was repeated for at least three times.
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Bactericidal Assays of Me(II)/Sulfite in Sewages and Natural Lake Water. Sewages
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of biological treatment tank and secondary sedimentation tank from Erlangmiao
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wastewater treatment plant (Wuhan, China) were sampled. The sampling sites were set
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at the well-mixed regions that were representative of the whole tank. For each tank, we
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chose at least two sampling points. Natural lake water of a nearby lake was also
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sampled to test the bactericidal effect of Me(II)/Sulfite (Scheme S1). Samples were
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stored in sterilized brown bottles to avoid light irradiation, and bactericidal assays were
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performed within the same day of sampling. PCA (plate count agar) was used to
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quantify the survival rate of total bacteria, while Endo agar was used to monitor the
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survival rate of coliforms. For the bactericidal assays of added E. coli, sewages or
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natural lake water were centrifuged at 1,000 g for 3 min followed by filtration with 0.45
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µm membranes, in order to remove original bacteria. Then exponential phase E. coli
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cultured in LB media was washed with desired water bodies (i.e. sewages or natural
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lake water), and then spiked into the same volume of corresponding sewages or natural
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lake water for Me(II)/Sulfite bactericidal assays (0.8 mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM
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Fe(II), 0.1 mM Cu(II), 2 mM sulfite).
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Radical-quenching
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Me(II)/Sulfite reactions (0.8 mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM Fe(II), 0.1 mM Cu(II), 2
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mM sulfite, pH 6), either of 400 mM TBA (HO• scavenger), 400 mM thiourea (SO4•-/HO•
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scavenger), or 2 mM dipyridyl (metal ions chelator) was added into the solution at the
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beginning of the reactions. The individual effect of TBA, thiourea, or dipyridyl was also
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investigated in the same condition without the presence of metal ions or sulfite.
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Samples were taken and analyzed after 2 h.
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Scanning Electron Microscopy analysis. 5 mL exponential phase bacteria after
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treatment for 2 h were collected and resuspended into an Eppendorf vial containing 1
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mL PBS buffer (pH 7.2). 2.5% glutaraldehyde was used to fix the bacterial cells at room
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temperature for 1.5 h. Samples were then collected and exposed for 10 min to a series
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of ethanol concentration solutions (30, 50, 70, 80, 95, or 100% ethanol/PBS) for
145
dehydration. The 100% ethanol treatment was repeated for twice, and the solutions
146
were then further dehydrated with anhydrous sodium sulfate. 10 µL of bacterial solution
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in 100% ethanol was dropped on glass substrate, and then a uniform layer of 10 nm Au
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was coated on the bacterial samples with an E-beam evaporator (QPrep400, Mantis,
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England). Samples were observed under 10-5 Torr vacuum in SEM (JSM-6510, JEOL,
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Japan).
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Protein Degradation Assay with Me(II)/Sulfite. The oxidative degradation capability
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towards polypeptide (0.1 mg/mL BSA) of Me(II)/Sulfite (0.8 mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II),
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0.4 mM Fe(II), 0.1 mM Cu(II), and 2 mM sulfite) was investigated in PBS buffer (pH 6).
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Reactions were carried out in a 96-well plate with constant shaking at 37 °C. After 2 h,
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samples were boiled at 98 °C for 5 min, and 40 µL boiled samples were then loaded on
Assay
of
Me(II)/Sulfite.
During bactericidal assays with
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10% SDS-PAGE for resolution. Protein gels were run at 200 V for 60 min with a Bio-rad
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electrophoresis cell.
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NADH Measurement. Conventional cofactor recycling assay was used to determine
159
intracellular NADH concentrations.24 5mL cells after treatment were at first collected via
160
centrifugation at 8000 g for 2 min, then 300 µL of 0.2 M NaOH was added to the cell
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pellets, followed by incubation at 55 °C for 10 min. The resulting extracts were then
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neutralized with 300 µL of 0.1 M HCl. Samples were then centrifuged at 12000 g for 5
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min, and supernatants were collected for further analysis. NADH recycling assay was
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performed with 50 µL neutralized supernatant, 50 µL of yeast ADH with 25 units activity,
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and 0.9 mL reagents mixture (11% ethanol, 4.4 mM EDTA, 0.47 mM 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-
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thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium bromide, and 3.7 mM phenazine ethosulfate in
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100 mM Bicine buffer, pH 8). The absorbance changes at 570 nm after 2 min reactions
168
were recorded. The same amount of cells without any treatment was used as a control.
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Results and Discussion
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Inactivation of Escherichia coli with Me(II)/Sulfite systems
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Divalent metal ions, i.e. Mn(II), Co(II), Fe(II), Cu(II), and sulfite combinatorically killed
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exponential phase E. coli cells at pH 6. In control experiments with single component of
173
metal ion or sulfite, negligible cell deaths were observed (Figure 1a). The bactericidal
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effect of Me(II)/Sulfite systems exhibited a time- and metal species-dependent manner.
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Me(II)/Sulfite systems, except Cu(II)/Sulfite system, resulted in less than 0.5 log
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inactivation at 1 h while more than 1.2 log inactivation at 3 h. Although lower
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concentration of cupric ion (0.1 mM) was used, Cu(II)/Sulfite exhibited higher degree of
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bactericidal effect than the other three metal ions combined with sulfite. Cu(II)/Sulfite
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inactivated 1.3 log of E. coli at 1 h, and more than 2.2 log of cells at 3 h.
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Auto-oxidation of (bi)sulfite catalyzed by metal ions has been widely recognized through
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radical chain reactions, involving several intermediary short-lived oxysulfur radicals, i.e.
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SO3•-, SO5•-, and SO4•-.17-19 During the radical chain reactions, SO5•- and SO4•- were
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secondarily derived from initially generated SO3•- (Table S1). As expected, evident
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signals corresponding to DMPO/SO3•- adduct (aHβ = 16.0 G, aN = 14.7 G)25,26 were
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visualized in the ESR spectra of Me(II)/Sulfite systems during the first 1 min reaction
186
(Figure 1b). Moreover, consistent with above observation, Cu(II)/Sulfite produced the
187
most pronounced signals indicating the highest abundance of oxidative radicals (Figure
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1b). Among the three oxysulfur radicals, SO4•- possesses a standard reduction potential
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of 2.5-3.1 V (NHE),27 comparable to that of HO• (1.8-2.7 V, NHE).28,29 SO4•- owned
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preeminent oxidative hydrogen abstraction capability, and Fe(II)/Sulfite system has
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been tentatively used for wastewater decontamination.20-22 Hence the most possible
192
effective bactericidal species was SO4•-.
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Effect of metal ions or sulfite concentrations
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E. coli survival rates were determined after inactivation by Me(II)/Sulfite systems for 2 h
195
with varying concentrations of metal ions or sulfite at pH 7. Figure 2 showed significant
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enhancements of bactericidal effect with increasing concentrations of sulfite (0-8 mM) or
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metal ions (for Mn(II), Co(II) and Fe(II): 0.05-0.8 mM; for Cu(II): 0.0125-0.2 mM).
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Cu(II)/Sulfite system mediated the most evident E. coli inactivation. For instance,
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addition of 8 mM sulfite and 0.1 mM Cu(II) resulted in 31-fold enhancement of bacterial
200
death compared with the mere presence of Cu(II). Further, 2 mM sulfite combined with
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0.2 mM Cu(II) killed bacteria 40-fold more efficient than that combined with 0.0125 mM
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Cu(II). The sole presence of either sulfite or metal ions at all tested concentrations did
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not kill bacteria more than 0.6 log of cells (Figure S1). Cu(II) was obviously more toxic
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than the other three metal ions, as 0.2 mM Cu(II) inactivated over 0.6 log of cells, higher
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than the inactivation efficiencies by other metal ions at 0.8 mM (Figure S1). The
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molecular mechanism of Cu(II) toxicity involved enhancement of cell membrane
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permeability and cellular protein denaturation.30,31 In contrast to previously observed
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inhibitive growth in nutritious media,32 the presence of 0.05-0.8 mM Co(II) surprisingly
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led to around 2-fold growth of E. coli in PBS buffer without any carbon source (Figure
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S1), indicating its pivotal role of participating in the synthesis of metalloprotein with poor
211
nutrients.33
212
Effect of pH
213
pH mainly affected the metal ion species distribution, and thus possibly affected the
214
initiation of catalyzed oxidation of sulfite.21 Aside from the bactericidal assays, we also
215
used a triphenylmethane dye (Coomassie Brilliant Blue) to probe the amount of
216
generated oxidative radicals by Me(II)/Sulfite at varying pHs (Figure S2). Through all
217
the assays, near-neutral pHs (5-8.5) were chosen as other pHs adversely inactivated
218
cells by destabilizing cell membrane and denaturing inherent functional enzymes34,35
219
and therefore may cause false positive observations with Me(II)/Sulfite systems.
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Mn(II)/Sulfite and Fe(II)/Sulfite systems were potent at lower pH, in terms of both dye
221
removal and bacterial inactivation (Figure 3a, Figure S2). At pH 5, Mn(II)/Sulfite
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inactivated over 3.2 log of cells, but its potency rapidly decayed with increasing pH; at
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pHs above 8, negligible bacterial inactivation was observed. Fe(II)/Sulfite inactivated 0.9
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log of cells at pH 8.5, while its bactericidal efficiency modestly increased to 1.9 log at pH
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5.
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Consistent with our previous results,23 Co(II)/Sulfite was more capable in dye removal at
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higher pHs (Figure S2), whereas its bactericidal effect exhibited a reverted pattern
228
(Figure 3). At pH 8.5, Co(II)/Sulfite inactivated 0.5 log of cells, but at pH 5 inactivated
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1.8 log of cells, resulting in a 22-fold enhancement. In sharp contrast, dye removal at pH
230
5 was significantly lower than that at pH 8.5. The mechanism for this contradictory
231
observation was not clear, and one plausible explanation was that higher pHs increased
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negative charges of bacterial surface and thus efficiently repulsing sulfite anion away
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from surface-bound catalytically active metal species.
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Cu(II)/Sulfite at lower pH values tended to mediate higher bacterial deaths, while a
235
notable exception was that Cu(II)/Sulfite at pH 8.5 inactivated 9.6-fold cells of that at pH
236
8 (Figure 3a), resulting in a bell-shaped bacterial inactivation pattern against pH.
237
Different from other metals, Cu(II) was a severely toxic metal, in particular at higher pHs
238
(Figure 3b), because 1) formed Cu(II)-OH complex readily adsorbed on bacterial
239
surface,36,37 and 2) moreover Cu(II)-OH complex was highly toxic and effective at
240
disrupting membrane structure than the other Cu(II) species.38,39 Therefore, at lower
241
pHs the bactericidal effects mainly came from Cu(II)/Sulfite as evidenced by efficient
242
dye removals (Figure S1), while the toxicity of Cu(II)-OH complex played the major role
243
at higher pHs.
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Morphological and Biochemical Characterizations of E. coli
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Morphological changes of E. coli in response to Me(II)/Sulfite treatments were examined
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by SEM (Figure 4a). Bacterial samples were coated with a uniform layer of 10 nm
247
atomic Au to improve the resolution of SEM by increasing the conductivity of the
248
samples and thus reducing the accumulation of charges upon irradiation of electron
249
beams. As a result, intensive darkness within the cytoplasmic region was observed for
250
treated cells indicating severe cellular components disruption, but untreated cells
251
exhibited normal homogeneity. In addition, the Mn(II)/Sulfite and Fe(II)/Sulfite
252
treatments altered a fraction of E. coli with rod shape into fragmented irregular shape.
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The contents of cellular reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, NADH, an
254
important biochemical indicator of the reducing power in cytoplasmic environment, was
255
quantified through a cofactor cycling method.24 NADH was especially important for
256
respiration-associated electron transport chain (ETC) and synthesis of certain
257
metabolites.40,41 Remarkable decreases of NADH contents of cells treated by
258
Me(II)/Sulfite were observed, wherein Cu(II)/Sulfite treatment particularly eliminated
259
93.7% of total cellular NADH (Figure 4b).
260
Furthermore, inspired by strong potencies of Me(II)/Sulfite systems in depleting NADH,
261
we attempted to investigate their abilities in degrading proteins. A model protein, bovine
262
serum albumin (BSA), was chosen as our target for polypeptide degradation assays. 0.1
263
mg/mL BSA was spiked into PBS buffer (pH = 6) together with metal ion and sulfite, and
264
40 µL samples were subjected to protein gel electrophoresis. The most evident
265
decrease in band intensity was observed with Cu(II)/Sulfite, whereas the other
266
Me(II)/Sulfite systems did not show detectable weakenings (Figure 4c). Densitometry
267
analysis assisted by ImageJ software showed that around 56% of BSA was degraded
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by Cu(II)/Sulfite. Although the other three Me(II)/Sulfite systems (i.e. Mn(II)/Sulfite,
269
Co(II)/Sulfite, and Fe(II)/Sulfite) did not exhibit polypeptide degradation capabilities,
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however, it was possible for them to inactivate cells through deactivating functional
271
enzymes.25,42 During the course of running SDS-PAGE, denatured linearized BSA
272
polypeptide was resolved based on its molecular weight. The denaturation of BSA due
273
to Me(II)/Sulfite prior to SDS-PAGE thus cannot be told. A recent example supportive of
274
protein denaturation by SO4•- was disease-associated prion protein inactivation.11
275
Roles of Radicals in Bactericidal Effect of Me(II)/Sulfite Systems
276
Me(II)/Sulfite reactions rapidly depleted dissolved oxygen (Figure S3a) accompanied by
277
proton generation (Table S1). However, oxygen deprivation did not cause detectable
278
bacterial death without Me(II)/Sulfite treatments (Figure S4), and generated proton did
279
not acidify the buffered solution (Figure S3b) and was thus not responsible for bacterial
280
inactivation (Figure 3). Moreover, three oxysulfur radicals, i.e. SO3•-, SO4•-, and SO5•-,
281
were directly produced during sulfite oxidation catalyzed by metal ions (Table S1). SO3•-
282
is fairly inert towards organic chemicals such as alcohols, but is extremely prone to
283
oxidation by oxygen into SO5•- with an estimated second-order rate constant of 109 M-1
284
s-1.43 It was thus concluded that SO3•- did not likely cause bacterial death. In addition,
285
because SO5•- was scarcely generated and less oxidative than SO4•-,43,44 the possibility
286
of its bactericidal action was also excluded. Hence, SO4•- could be the most possible
287
bactericide responsible for cell inactivation during Me(II)/Sulfite treatments.
288
Besides SO4•-, another plausible possibility is that formed hydroxyl radical (HO•), due to
289
the electron-scavenging of H2O by SO4•- (eq 1),8,9 inactivated bacterial cells. We
290
therefore used a scavenging method to distinguish the roles of SO4•- and HO• in
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Me(II)/Sulfite systems at pH 6.8,9 Tert-butanol (TBA) quenched HO• with a 1000-fold
292
selectivity higher than SO4•-, while thiourea non-selectively quenched both radicals. For
293
all Me(II)/Sulfite systems, addition of SO4•-/HO•-scavenging thiourea greatly suppressed
294
bacterial inactivation, more evidently for Mn(II)/Sulfite and Cu(II)/Sulfite, while the
295
addition of HO•-scavenging TBA exhibited less potent inhibition (Figure 5a). It was
296
therefore concluded that SO4•- played the major role in inactivating cells, in agreement
297
with previous report.21 We further used a strong metal ion chelator, 2,2’-dipyridyl, to fully
298
stall the catalyzed sulfite oxidation. As expected, since there was no intermediary
299
oxidative species generated, negligible bacterial deaths were observed (Figure 5a). It
300
should be noted that, conventionally used ethanol (SO4•-/HO• scavenger) and EDTA
301
(metal ions chelator) were avoided because they were reported to be detrimental to
302
bacteria.45,46 But TBA, thiourea, and dipyridyl at used concentrations did not affect cell
303
survival rates (Figure S4).
304
SO4•- + H2O SO42- + HO• + H+
(k2 = (103-104) s-1)
(1)
305 306
Possible Mechanisms of Bactericidal Effect of Me(II)/Sulfite Systems
307
We reasoned that, generated reactive species, such as oxidative short-lived SO4•-, had
308
to act on cellular components for bacterial inactivation purpose. Accordingly, the
309
catalytically active metal ion species had to be bound onto cell surface. We hence
310
ultrasonically cracked the cells treated by either metal ions alone or Me(II)/Sulfite
311
together, centrifuged and collected the supernatants, and subsequently quantified
312
cellular metal ions with AAS (Figure 5b). As expected, significant cellular uptakes were
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found for all four metal ions. Among them, cells treated by 0.1 mM Cu(II) mediated a
314
most evident 134-fold increasement in cellular Cu(II) content by comparison with
315
untreated cells, presumably because Cu(II) readily complexed with cellular polypeptide
316
through highly affinitive Cu(II)-thiol group interactions.47,48 Additionally, we also found
317
that cellular metal ion uptakes by Me(II)/Sulfite treatments were generally less effective
318
than the treatments of metal ions alone (Figure 5b), likely because the presence of
319
sulfite complexed with metal ions and thus reducing the chances of metal ions adsorbed
320
onto bacterial surface. The observed less Cu(II) adsorption in the presence of sulfite
321
also supportively explained the fact that bacterial inactivation efficiencies of
322
Cu(II)/Sulfite were even lower than that of the single role of Cu(II) at pH 8 and 8.5
323
(Figure 3). We concluded that the toxicity of Cu(II)/Sulfite at higher pHs was mainly
324
from Cu(II), and therefore less surface-bound Cu(II) due to sulfite complexation led to
325
attenuated bacterial deaths. Hence, we believed the bacterial inactivations by
326
Me(II)/Sulfite systems were a surface-bound in situ oxidative damage process.
327
Cu(II)/Sulfite was an especially attractive system as it owned the most potent
328
bactericidal effects. During the initiation of radical chain reactions, Cu(I) was generated
329
via reduction of Cu(II) by sulfite (Table S1), and the presence of Cu(I) was
330
experimentally verified (Figure S5). More importantly, Cu(I) has been reported to be an
331
effective bactericide.49 We thus assessed the bactericidal role of Cu(I) in an anaerobic
332
chamber purged with nitrogen. The exclusion of oxygen did not allow the propagation of
333
radical chain reactions for Cu(II)/Sulfite system (Table S1), and the effect of Cu(I) could
334
be specifically investigated. We surprisingly found that Cu(I) formed by Cu(II)/Sulfite
335
with the absence of oxygen absolutely inactivated all the cells (~ 8 log), while the
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presence of oxygen led to 1.8 log of bacterial inactivation (Figure 5c). Since oxygen
337
played inverse roles in the generation of Cu(I) (Figure S5) and SO4•- (Table S1), the net
338
effect of oxygen on Cu(II)/Sulfite bactericidal performance was still vague, and therefore
339
the role of oxygen was investigated in more details (Figure S6). Oxygen ratio of 0, 0.01,
340
0.05, 0.2, and 0.4 in oxygen/nitrogen mixing gas at fixed flow rate of 400 mL/min were
341
constantly purged into 200 mL of Cu(II)/Sulfite reaction solution. When oxygen ratio
342
slightly increased from 0 to 0.01, Cu(II)/Sulfite killing efficiency dramatically decreased
343
from 3.7-log to 0.8-log after reaction for 1 h, indicating the strong bactericidal potency of
344
Cu(I). The increase of oxygen ratio 0.01 up to 0.4 led to the improvement of
345
Cu(II)/Sulfite bactericidal efficiency from 0.8-log to 2.1-log. While the increase of oxygen
346
ratio reduced Cu(I) amount, it improved the SO4•- production, and therefore can further
347
enhance bactericidal effect of Cu(II)/Sulfite. As expected, without molecular oxygen, no
348
reactive species were generated for Mn(II)/Sulfite, Co(II)/Sulfite, or Fe(II)/Sulfite, and
349
hence bacterial deaths were greatly suppressed (Figure 5c). Conclusively, based on
350
the obtained results, triple components majorly contributed to the bactericidal effect of
351
Cu(II)/Sulfite, i.e. 1) oxidative SO4•-, 2) toxic Cu(II)-OH complex at higher pHs, and 3)
352
monovalent Cu(I) (Scheme 1). The triply synergistic actions may also explain the fact
353
that Cu(II)/Sulfite system was the most efficient system among the Me(II)/Sulfite
354
systems investigated in this work.
355
Disinfection of Sewages and Natural Lake Water with Me(II)/Sulfite Systems
356
Application of Me(II)/Sulfite systems in inactivation of other bacteria genres, e.g. various
357
antibiotic-resistant E. coli strains (Figure S7), Cu(II)-resistant E. coli (Figure S8),
358
Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacillus subtilis (Figure S9) were proved to be valid
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(Text S1). Despite all this, our aim was to apply the established Me(II)/Sulfite systems
360
into real wastewater treatment plants. Sewage samples were taken at two
361
representative sites from Erlangmiao wastewater treatment plant, i.e. biological
362
treatment tank and secondary sedimentation tank. The samples had typical sewage
363
characters, such as near-neutral pH, and high contents of ammonium and phosphate
364
ions (Table S2). Bactericidal assays were performed immediately after sampling, in
365
order to avoid possible bacterial inactivation during storage. Moreover, to mimic real
366
condition, sewage samples were directly used without filtration, and reaction solutions
367
were subjected to minimum stirring. Furtherly, we used PCA (plate count agar), a rich
368
and non-selective medium, to recover total viable bacteria. And Endo agar, a selective
369
medium, was used to isolate coliform colonies that formed green metallic sheen on the
370
colorless plate, such as E. coli. Initially, total bacteria CFUs per mL of biological
371
treatment tank and secondary sedimentation tank were 5 × 105 and 5 × 103,
372
respectively. In both tanks, coliforms were around 10% of total bacteria. In biological
373
treatment tank, Cu(II)/Sulfite inactivated 2 log of both total bacteria and coliforms after
374
reaction for 3 h, while the other three Me(II)/Sulfite systems did not show detectable
375
bacterial inactivation (Figure 6a, 6b). In secondary sedimentation tank, both
376
Cu(II)/Sulfite and Co(II)/Sulfite rapidly and absolutely inactivated total bacteria and
377
coliforms within 2 h, whereas Mn(II)/Sulfite and Fe(II)/Sulfite did not mediate significant
378
bactericidal effects (Figure 6d, 6e). Additionally, it has been observed that Cu(II)/Sulfite
379
and Co(II)/Sulfite killed coliforms more efficiently than total bacteria, likely due to the
380
complex bacterial species within total bacteria.
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381
The upper limit of bacterial density in aqueous solution is around 108 CFU/mL, even in
382
the case of nutritious media. We therefore attempted to examine the bactericidal
383
efficiencies of Me(II)/Sulfite systems with the presence of maximum bacterial density.
384
Exponential phase E. coli with OD600 around 0.4-0.6, corresponding to 108 CFU/mL,
385
was collected and added into the same volume of biological treatment tank and
386
secondary sedimentation tank sewage samples. Consistent with above results,
387
Cu(II)/Sulfite absolutely inactivated bacteria within 1 h, and Co(II)/Sulfite killed all
388
bacteria at 2 h. The preeminent performance of Co(II)/Sulfite may associate with the
389
toxicity of Co(II) with the presence of sewage carbon source.32
390
Disinfection of lake water is important as it is a possible source of drinking water. Hence,
391
besides sewage samples, we also tested bacterial inactivation efficiencies of
392
Me(II)/Sulfite systems towards natural lake water (Figure S10). Cu(II)/Sulfite could
393
rapidly inactivate total bacteria (4 log) in lake water within 1 h. Co(II)/Sulfite also potently
394
killed bacteria but slower than Cu(II)/Sulfite, and Co(II)/Sulfite inactivated all bacteria
395
after 2 h. Neither Mn(II)/Sulfite nor Fe(II)/Sulfite showed significant bacterial inactivation
396
(Figure S10a). Consistently, Cu(II)/Sulfite and Co(II)/Sulfite inactivated 8 log and 3.2 log
397
of added E. coli (~ 108 CFU/mL) in natural lake water after reactions for 3 h (Figure
398
S10b). Moreover, CT (concentration [mg/L] × time [min]) value of Cu(II)/Sulfite to
399
inactivate 4-log E. coli varied between 1600 and 9600 in terms of different water bodies
400
(Figure 6c, 6f, Figure S10), comparable to the CT values of chlorine (i.e. 1575) and
401
ozone (i.e. 1440).50 Considering the costs/risks associated with production, storage,
402
and/or carcinogenic byproducts of chlorine and ozone, the cost-effectiveness of
403
Cu(II)/Sulfite is especially attractive. In conclusion, Cu(II)/Sulfite exhibited especially
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potent bactericidal performances in all tested water bodies, and therefore it ought to be
405
considered as a promising disinfection method in real practice.
406
A major finding of this study was that SO4•- generated from sulfite autoxidation catalyzed
407
by divalent metal ion, i.e. Mn(II), Co(II), Fe(II) or Cu(II), was potent in killing expanding
408
varieties of bacteria regardless of their antibiotic resistance. Cu(II)-resistant E. coli
409
persisters were especially sensitive to Cu(II)/Sulfite treatment, highlighting its significant
410
environmental implication as proliferative waterborne bacteria usually develop
411
resistance to aqueous toxic species. Concerns of oxygen-dependence and organic
412
matter interference may be raised towards Me(II)/Sulfite systems in treating real sewage
413
samples with complex components, and we therefore attempted the bactericidal
414
performance of Me(II)/Sulfite systems into sewage disinfection. As a result, Cu(II)/Sulfite
415
and Co(II)/Sulfite remarkably inactivated total bacteria and coliforms without additional
416
aeration, validating the feasibility of these two systems in real practice. Notably,
417
catalysts for sulfite oxidation are not limited to the four herein investigated metal ions,
418
and other heavy metals such as Cr(III/VI) or Ni(II) also own powerful catalysis
419
capabilities,17,51 expanding the application scope of our methods. Hereby, we propose
420
two ways of applying Me(II)/Sulfite into real wastewater disinfection. At first, free metal
421
ions can be added into wastewater together with sulfite. Tandem post-Me(II)/Sulfite
422
treatment units, including coagulation/sedimentation, sludge disposal, and adsorption,
423
can eliminate most of present metal ions. Alternatively, efficient heterogeneous
424
catalysts, such as cobalt ferrite nanoparticles,23 can be used to activate sulfite oxidation
425
in wastewater. Heterogeneous catalysts own the advantages of minimum metal ion
426
leaching, stable performance, and high catalytic activity,23,52 therefore holding more
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promises. The most important aspect of environmental implications is that catalytically
428
active metal ions and sulfite can be readily obtained from industrial wastewater and
429
combustion flue gas respectively, and eventually multiple purposes could be achieved,
430
i.e. flue gas desulfurization, bacterial inactivation, and organics decontamination if
431
present.
432 433
■ ASSOCIATED CONTENT
434
Supporting Information
435
Methods, reaction equations, water quality characterizations, and additional figures
436
depicting bacteria survival rate under various treatments. This material is available free
437
of charge via the Internet athttp://pubs.acs.org.
438 439
■ AUTHOR INFORMATION
440
Corresponding Authors
441
Danna Zhou, e-mail:
[email protected].
442
Feng Wu, e-mail:
[email protected].
443
Notes
444
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
445
■ ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
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446
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC
447
No. 21477090 and 41103066), the NSFC-CNRS_PRC Cooperation Project (No.
448
21711530144) and Science and Technology Project of Guangdong Province (No.
449
2014B030301055). Comments from anonymous reviewers are also appreciated.
450 451
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599
.
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Table of Content
600
O2
Me(IIa/IIIb)
SO32-
Me(Ia/IIb)
a. Cu b. Mn, Co, Fe
O2
SO32-
SO3● SO5●-
SO32-
SO4●-
601 602
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603 604
Figure 1. E. coli inactivation efficiencies (a) and ESR spectra (b) of Me(II)/Sulfite. (0.8
605
mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM Fe(II), 0.1 mM Cu(II), 2 mM sulfite, PBS, pH 6).
606
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Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
100 10 1 0
607
0.5
1
2
4
8
Sulfite concentration (mM)
Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
b100 Survival rate (%)
Survival rate (%)
a
Page 32 of 38
10 1
Mn(II)/Co(II)/Fe(II)0.05 0.1 Cu(II) 0.0125 0.025
0.2 0.05
0.4 0.1
0.8 0.2
Metal ion concentration (mM)
608
Figure 2. Effects of sulfite (a) and metal ion (b) concentration on the E. coli inactivation
609
efficiencies of Me(II)/Sulfite. (a) 0.8 mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM Fe(II), 0.1 mM
610
Cu(II), sulfite concentrations varied between 0 and 8 mM, PBS, pH 7, reaction for 2 h.
611
(b) 2 mM sulfite, Mn(II) (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8 mM), Co(II) (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8 mM),
612
Fe(II) (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8 mM), Cu(II) (0.0125, 0.025, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2 mM). PBS, pH 7,
613
incubation for 2h.
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a
Survival rate (%)
Survival rate (%)
100 10 1 0.1 5
616
b
Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
6
7
8
8.5
Sulfite Mn(II) Co(II) Fe(II) Cu(II)
100
1 0.1
5
6
7
8
8.5
pH
pH
617
Figure 3. Effect of pH on the E. coli inactivation efficiencies of Me(II)/Sulfite (a) and
618
sulfite or Me(II) (b). Magenta curve in panel a represented the trendline of Cu(II)/Sulfite
619
bactericidal performance against pH. 0.8 mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM Fe(II), 0.1
620
mM Cu(II), 2 mM sulfite, incubation in PBS for 2h.
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a No treatment
Mn(II)/Sulfite
Fe(II)/Sulfite
Cu(II)/Sulfite
c Residual NADH (%)
b
622
Co(II)/Sulfite
120
kD 95 72 55
80 40
43 0
t en ulfite ulfite ulfite ulfite m t a /S /S /S /S tre n(II) o(II) e(II) u(II) o F C C M N
34
623
Figure 4. Morphological characterization of E. coli with SEM (a), cellular NADH
624
depletion (b), and BSA degradation (c) after treatments with Me(II)/Sulfite. 0.8 mM
625
Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM Fe(II), 0.1 mM Cu(II), 2 mM sulfite. PBS, pH 6, incubation
626
for 2h.
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Figure 5. (a) Me(II)/Sulfite bactericidal performances on E. coli after quenching with
630
TBA, thiourea, or dipyridyl. (b) Cellular metal content comparative quantifications by
631
treatments of Me(II) alone or Me(II)/Sulfite towards E. coli. (c) Effect of oxygen on E. coli
632
inactivation efficiencies of Me(II)/Sulfite, 2h. 0.8 mM Mn(II), 0.4 mM Co(II), 0.4 mM Fe(II),
633
0.1 mM Cu(II), 2 mM sulfite. PBS, pH 6, incubation for 2 h. (n.d., not detectable).
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O2
Me(IIa/IIIb)
O2
SO3
636
2-
Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite
SO32-
Me(Ia/IIb)
a. Cu b. Mn, Co, Fe
635
SO32-
SO4●-
SO3
●-
Me(II)-OH complex
SO5●SO4●-
SO32-
Cu(I)
Cu(II)/Sulfite
SO4●Cu(II)-OH SO 23
Scheme 1. Bactericidal mechanisms of Me(II)/Sulfite.
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10 Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
0
1
2
10 Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
1
3
0
d100
e100
Survival rate (%)
Survival rate (%)
10 Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
0
638
1
2
2
3
10 1
Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
0.1 0.01 0
Time (h)
Time (h)
1
1
Added E. coli
c 100
3
f
10 Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
1 0.1 0
Time (h)
1
2
1
2
3
Time (h)
Survival rate (%)
1
Coliforms
b100
Survival rate (%)
Total bacteria
Survival rate (%)
Survival rate (%)
a100
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3
Time (h)
100 1 0.01
Mn(II)/Sulfite Co(II)/Sulfite Fe(II)/Sulfite Cu(II)/Sulfite
1E-4 1E-6
0
1
2
3
Time (h)
639
Figure 6. Bactericidal performance of Me(II)/Sulfite on sewage samples. Samples from
640
biological treatment tank (a-c) and secondary sedimentation tank (d-f) in Erlangmiao
641
wastewater treatment plant were tested. Bactericidal efficiencies with total bacteria (a,
642
d), coliforms (b, e), and added E. coli (c, f) were monitored. Mn(II) 0.8mM, Co(II) 0.4mM,
643
Fe(II) 0.4mM, Cu(II) 0.1mM, 2mM sulfite.
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