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Arsenic attenuation in geothermal streamwater coupled with biogenic arsenic(III) oxidation
Institution:1. Department of Cellular Biology and Pharmacology, Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA;2. Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Aichi 466-8550, Japan;3. SER-CAT and the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA;4. Molecular Biophysics and Integrated Bioimaging, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley Center for Structural Biology, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
Abstract:In the present study, we investigated As behavior in a high-As hot spring (Sambe hot spring, Shimane, Japan) by coupling direct chemical speciation by synchrotron-based XAFS and HPLC–ICP-MS with microbial As-redox transformation gene analysis. The concentration of soluble As in the spring streamwater decreased immediately along the flow in correlation with Fe behavior, indicating that As in the streamwater was naturally attenuated in the streamwater. Iron XAFS analysis suggested deposition of Fe(III) oxyhydroxides along the flow. Thus, considering the strong affinity of As to Fe oxyhydroxides, the observed attenuation in As was possibly caused by sorption (or incorporation) of As on Fe(III) oxyhydroxides. Both dissolved As(III) and As(V) were present in the aqueous phase, and As(III) was rapidly oxidized to As(V) (<30 s) along the flow. The oxidation kinetics indicated the occurrence of biotic As(III) oxidation, because obtained As(III) oxidation rate (6.7–7.8 μM min?1) was much faster than the reported abiotic oxidation rates. Furthermore, the bacterial arsenite oxidase gene (aioA) was detected in DNA extracted from all samples (average of 2.0 × 105 copies dry g?1), which also supported potential attributes of biological As(III) oxidation in situ. In solid phase samples from sampling points analyzed by XAFS, most of the As existed as oxidized pentavalent form, As(V). This result indicated that this form was preferentially partitioned to the solid phase because of the much higher affinity of As(V) than of As(III) to Fe(III) oxyhydroxides. Considering the kinetic and microbiological findings, it is indicated that biotic process was predominantly responsible for As(III) oxidation at the present site, and this biotic As(III) oxidation to As(V) controlled the observed attenuation of As, because oxidized As(V) was removed from the aqueous phase by Fe(III) oxyhydroxides more efficiently.
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