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Volatilization of mercury from natural water by a broad-spectrum Hg-resistantBacillus pasteurii strain DR2
Authors:K Pahan  J Chaudhuri  D K Ghosh  R Gachhui  S Ray  A Mandal
Abstract:Summary A broad-spectrum mercury-resistant bacterial strain was isolated from contaminated water and was identified as Bacillus pasteurii strain DR2. It could volatilize Hg-compounds including organomercurials from its growth media. It utilized several aromatic compounds as a sole source of carbon. The bacterial strain eliminated HgCl2 from sterile river water and the presence of benzene, toluene, naphthalene and nitrobenzene at 1 mM concentration in the system increased the rate of mercury volatilization, the volatilization rate being highest with benzene. When 1.7×107 cells of this bacterial strain were added per ml of non-sterile water the bacterial strain volatilized more than 90 percent of mercury from mercuric chloride and organo-mercurials like PMA, thiomersol and methoxy ethyl mercuric chloride (MEMC). In the absence of this bacterial strain the volatilization of PMA and MEMC due to the presence of other Hg-resistant organisms in nonsterile polluted water ranged between 20–25 percent and of HgCl2 was about 40 percent. However, in the presence of B. pasteurii DR2 volatilization of these Hg-compounds from non-sterile water increased by 20–40 percent. In the presence of 1 mM benzene the rate of mercury volatilization was even higher. In all the cases the rate of volatilization was higher in the first seven days than in the next seven days.Professor A. Mandal, MSc, PhD is Head of the Department of Biochemistry at the University College of Science, 35 Ballygunge Circular Road, Calcutta 700019, to whom correspondence should be addressed. His co-workers are Dr K. Pahan, Postdoctoral Associate, Department of Cell Biology and Paediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, USA; Dr J. Chaudhuri, Senior Lecturer, Department of Molecular Biology, BKC College, Calcutta, India; Dr D.K. Ghosh, Postdoctoral Associate, Department of Biochemistry, University College of Science, Calcutta, India; Dr R. Gachhui, Postdoctoral Associate, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, USA; and Dr S. Ray, Postdoctoral Associate, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, Department of Biochemistry, Baltimore, USA.
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