Stopping Harmful Metals
in Their Tracks
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TEM (top) and NanoSIMS (bottom) images of biogenic
zinc sulfide aggregates. Red, green, and blue areas represent regions
of sulfur, nitrogen, and carbon, respectively. Orange and yellow
areas show the intimate association of both sulfur and nitrogen.
First, the researchers imaged the biofilms with transmission electron
microscopy (TEM) at NCEM, finding that the zinc sulfide nanoparticles
were arranged in dense aggregates. Secondary ion mass spectrometry
at a spatial resolution of ~50 nm (NanoSIMS) was performed at Livermore
to determine the quantitative elemental and isotopic composition
of the samples' surfaces. Nitrogen was found in the samples. A
comparison of TEM images with NanoSIMS sulfur distribution maps
determined that the zinc sulfide spheroids were the only structures
within the biofilm containing significant sulfur concentrations.
In addition, high nitrogen concentrations along the surfaces of
some aggregates suggested protein-rich regions, indicating the
nitrogen was organic.

NanoSIMS secondary-ion images of an ultramicrotomed
TEM section of biofilm. Nitrogen was detected as CN–,
NO–, and
NS–, and was quantified by comparison to reference
samples. Composite element distribution map (~10 µm x 10 µm)
of 12C (blue), 12C14N for N (green), and 32S (red). Colors reflect
the proportion of each species. Uniformly red regions represent
relatively pure S (as ZnS), whereas orange and yellow regions
indicate the presence of increased levels of N. Light blue regions
indicate the presence of both C and N, with little to no S (no
ZnS).
The team turned to ALS Beamline 1.4.3 to
confirm the NanoSIMS findings. Using Fourier-transform infrared
spectroscopy (SR-FTIR) with a ~10-µm spatial resolution,
they characterized the organics. Absorptions at ~1580 and 1640
cm–1 were
associated only with the zinc sulfide spheroid-rich regions
of the biofilm. These absorption features indicated amide II and
amide I vibration modes, respectively, characteristic of polypeptide-
and/or protein-derived amino acids, thus confirming the NanoSIMS
analysis.

SR-FTIR transmission spectra of biogenic ZnS
aggregates (black) and background biofilm (gray). Amide I (~1640
cm–1) and II
(~1580 cm–1) absorption features are diagnostic
of amino-acid–associated bond vibrations in polypeptides
and/or proteins.
Polyacrylamide gel analysis of proteins extracted from the organic
biofilm and the zinc sulfide spheroids suggested the nitrogen detected
by NanoSIMS and SR-FTIR was associated with proteins within the
mass range of bacterial proteins known to bind certain metals,
and genes for these proteins have been reported in some sulfate-reducing
bacteria. Therefore, the zinc-sulfide–associated proteins
from these samples may serve a metal-binding function.
After confirming
the existence of proteins in the spheroids, the researchers sought
to understand which amino acids are involved. Aggregation experiments
were performed involving synthetic zinc sulfide nanoparticles and
several amino acids. The researchers found that the presence of
cysteine, a building block for most proteins, yielded the most
extensive and prolonged aggregation, with some aggregates measuring
ten microns in diameter.
Biominerals
(mineral–protein mixtures) normally form within organisms.
These biomineral spheroidal aggregates, however, occurred as far
as hundreds of microns from the microbial cell. The cause for this
is not clear. Proteins, peptides, and amino acids could be released
after cell death and scavenged by hydrophobic zinc sulfide surfaces.
Alternatively, bacteria may export zinc-binding proteins for a
physiological reason. Most known bacterial metal-binding proteins
are produced for intracellular binding and the export of toxic
metals. In this case, biofilm proteins may have bound excess aqueous
Zn2+ or interacted with
bound Zn(II) and other proteins after zinc sulfide precipitation.
With both scenarios, external aggregation of metal–sulfide nanoparticles
is promoted.
Even with these unanswered questions, the results are exciting
in that they suggest an avenue for bioremediation of the most dangerous
and difficult-to-remediate hazardous waste: the use of microbially
derived extracellular proteins to limit the dispersal of nanoparticulate
metal-bearing phases that may otherwise be transported away from
their source by subsurface fluid flow.
Research conducted by J.W. Moreau (University of California,
Berkeley), P.K. Weber and I.D. Hutcheon (Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory), M.C. Martin and B. Gilbert (Berkeley
Lab), and J. Banfield (University of California, Berkeley, and
Berkeley Lab).
Research funding: U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy
Sciences (BES), and Environmental Research Genomics Genomes to
Life Research Program; NASA Astrobiology Institute. Operation
of the ALS is supported by BES.
Publication about this research: J.W. Moreau, P.K. Weber, M.C.
Martin, B. Gilbert, I.D. Hutcheon, and J.F. Banfield, "Extracellular
proteins limit the dispersal of biogenic nanoparticles," Science 316,
1600 (2007). |