Laser Spectroscopic Studies of Interactions of U<sup>VI</sup> with Bacterial Phosphate Species
Article 2003 en
Authors
RK
R. Knopp
PP
Petra J. Panak
LW
L. Andrew Wray
Abstract
1 min read
Abstract We have investigated the interactions of U VI with two bacterial phosphate‐containing species: Gram‐positive Bacillus sphaericus and Gram‐negative Psedomonas aeruginosa. The Gram‐positive B. sphaericus was investigated by using Raman spectroscopy and time‐resolved laser‐induced fluorescence spectroscopy (TRLFS). We found that living cells, spores, and intact heat‐killed cells complexed U VI (pH 4.5) through phosphate groups bound to their surfaces, while decomposed cells released H 2 PO 4 − and precipitated U VI as UO 2 (H 2 PO 4 ) 2 . TRLFS of U VI showed that Gram‐negative P. aeruginosa —genetically engineered to accumulate polyphosphate, subsequently degrade it, and secrete phosphate—precipitated U VI quantitatively at pH 4.5. The same bacterial strain, not induced to secrete phosphate, sorbed only a small amount of U VI .
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.