Cysteine-induced sulfide bioprecipitation enables simultaneous efficient dechlorination and cadmium removal by Pseudomonas sp. CP-1.
Zu Y, Chen X, Zhang Z, Wang A, Li Z
Phytoremediation
PubMedCadmium from industrial contamination quietly accumulates in garden vegetables and leafy greens grown in affected soils, and this bacterial approach could clean up the groundwater that feeds those plots before the metal ever reaches your food.
When industrial sites are abandoned, they often leave behind a nasty mix of chemical solvents and heavy metals like cadmium that seep into groundwater. Scientists discovered that a common soil bacterium can tackle both problems at once if you give it a simple amino acid called cysteine — the bacterium uses it to trap the cadmium as a harmless solid while still breaking down the chlorinated chemicals. This two-for-one cleanup was previously thought impossible because cadmium normally poisons the very microbes needed to do the job.
Key Findings
A cysteine-to-cadmium molar ratio of 1:2 was sufficient to enable simultaneous reductive dechlorination and cadmium removal by Pseudomonas sp. CP-1
Cysteine works by triggering sulfide bioprecipitation, which immobilizes cadmium as a solid mineral and shields the bacterium from heavy-metal toxicity
The target chlorinated compound was 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (a persistent industrial pollutant), and cysteine supplementation measurably improved its dechlorination rate kinetics
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers found that adding the amino acid cysteine to a soil bacterium allows it to simultaneously break down toxic chlorinated chemicals and neutralize cadmium in contaminated groundwater — two pollutants that normally can't be cleaned up together because cadmium kills the microbes doing the work.
Abstract Preview
Organohalides and heavy metals often co-contaminate groundwater, however, the biotoxicity of heavy metal strongly inhibits microbial reductive dechlorination activity and existing bioremediation st...
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