Abstract:
Arsenic (As) contamination is a severe health hazard in Southeast Asia, notably in
Bangladesh. An ecologically sustainable biological arsenite oxidation technology is
preferred due to pollution created by chemical methods. The hypothesis of our research
work- arsenic-contaminated aquifers and soils contain arsenotrophic bacteria capable
of transforming highly toxic arsenite (III) to less toxic arsenate (V), which play a
critical role in the development of a sustainable, eco-friendly bioremediation model on
a laboratory and pilot scale. Therefore, this study was designed to identify potential
candidates that could significantly contribute to arsenic detoxification, accumulation, and
immobilization while also providing a scientific foundation for future electrochemical
sensor development. We applied both cultivation-dependent and independent
(metagenomic) approaches for the study. 403 isolates were retrieved from fourteen As
containing (0.01-0.5 mg/L) groundwater (GW) and twelve soil samples from arsenicprone
areas-
Munshiganj,
Chandpur,
and
Bogura
districts
in
Bangladesh.
29
GW
isolates
were
screened
as
arsenite
transforming
bacteria.
Based
on
the
16S
rRNA
gene
sequence,
five
taxonomic classes (α, β, γ, Firmicutes, Actinobacteria) were identified in
heterotrophic and three (β, γ, Actinobacteria) in autotrophic GW bacteria. γ
proteobacteria dominated the cultivated isolates. Common genera Lysinibacillus,
Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Stenotrophomonas, Delftia, Enterobacter, Achromobacter,
Bacillus, Staphylococcus, Paraburkholderia, Burkholderia, Comamonas, Klebsiella were
found. We also identified some unique genera Ponticoccus, Kluyvera, Janibacter,
Microbacterium, and Brevundimonas in As-contaminated water, especially in
Bangladesh. Arsenic metabolizing genes arsenite efflux pumps (arsB) with high
abundance and arsenite oxidase (aioA) genes were detected in cultured isolates,
confirming their role in As resistance and biotransformation. They also revealed a wide
range of MICarsenite concentrations ranging from 2 to 32 mM. We also assessed the
arsenite transformation efficiency of arsenite oxidizing bacteria. As-affected
groundwater microbiomes were identified, along with their interactions with
arsenotrophic genes, virulence factor-associated genes (VFGs), antibiotic resistance
genes (AGRs), and metabolic functional potentials. There was considerable
heterogeneity in species richness and microbial community structure. Phyla
proteobacteria (γ -proteobacteria), firmicutes, and acidobacteria dominate these
diversities between culture-independent and dependent methods. The cultureindependent approach revealed considerable parallels with the culture-dependent method
at the genus level. Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, Stenotrophomonas, Delftia,
Enterobacter, Achromobacter, Paraburkholderia, Burkholderia, Comamonas, and
Klebsiella were detected using both techniques, proving their complementarity in
detecting native population bacteria in As containing GW. MR pipeline explored the
presence of arsenotrophic (arsB, acr3, arsD, arsH, arsR) arsenate reductase, etc.) and
other associated functional genes in the metagenomes of both districts. Most of these
genes were arsenical pump-specific, as indicated in our culture-dependent study. The soil
microbiome was strongly linked to the GW microbiome based on bacterial abundance,
diversity, and arsenotrophic genes distribution. The present study selected and explored
highly arsenite-resistant novel bacteria Achromobacter xylosoxidans BHW-15 with good
As (III) transformation capability for electrochemical As species detection and
bioremediation. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) analysis evidenced the
intracellular As absorption capability of A. xylosoxidans BHW15 and established a
substantial correlation with its MIC value. Arsenite oxidase (aioA) gene expression was
also assessed to observe the As (III) oxidation efficiency. Additionally, the immobilized
whole-cell demonstrated As (III) conversion throughout 18 days. We developed a
modified GCE/P-Arg/ErGO-AuNPs electrode that effectively sensed and evaluated the
conversion of As (III) to As (V) by electron acceptance revealing the existence of a
functioning As oxidase enzyme in the cells. We reported the electrochemical Astransformation
in Achromobacter sp. for the first time. Our study found promising
arsenotrophic bacteriomes whose genetic profile will be helpful to develop arsenic
detoxification strategies. The data from this investigation may enable the future
development of a cost-effective, environmentally friendly biosensor for arsenic species
detection.