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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 2001, p. 1517-1521, Vol. 67, No. 4
Department of Botany and Microbiology,
University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019
Received 12 June 2000/Accepted 4 January 2001
Biological Cr(VI) reduction was studied in anaerobic sediments from
an aquifer in Norman, Okla. Microcosms containing sediment and mineral
medium were amended with various electron donors to determine those
most important for biological Cr(VI) reduction. Cr(VI) (about 340 µM)
was reduced with endogenous substrates (no donor), or acetate was
added. The addition of formate, hydrogen, and glucose stimulated
Cr(VI) reduction compared with reduction in unamended controls. From
these sediments, an anaerobic Cr(VI)-utilizing enrichment was obtained
that was dependent upon hydrogen for both growth and Cr(VI) reduction.
No methane was produced by the enrichment, which reduced about 750 µM
Cr(VI) in less than six days. The dissolved hydrogen concentration was
used as an indicator of the terminal electron accepting process
occurring in the sediments. Microcosms with sediments, groundwater, and
chromate metabolized hydrogen to a concentration below the detection
limits of the mercury vapor gas chromatograph. In microcosms without
chromate, the hydrogen concentration was about 8 nM, a concentration
comparable to that under methanogenic conditions. When these microcosms
were amended with 500 µM Cr(VI), the dissolved hydrogen concentration
quickly fell below the detection limits. These results showed that the hydrogen concentration under chromate-reducing conditions became very
low, as low as that reported under nitrate- and manganese-reducing conditions, a result consistent with the free energy changes for these
reactions. The utilization of formate, lactate, hydrogen, and glucose
as electron donors for Cr(VI) reduction indicates that increasing the
availability of hydrogen results in a greater capacity for Cr(VI)
reduction. This conclusion is supported by the existence of an
enrichment dependent upon hydrogen for growth and Cr(VI) reduction.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.4.1517-1521.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Relationship of Hydrogen Bioavailability to
Chromate Reduction in Aquifer Sediments
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Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Botany and Microbiology, University of Oklahoma, 770 Van Vleet Oval, Norman, OK 73019. Phone: (405) 325-6050. Fax: (405) 325-7619. E-mail:
McInerney{at}ou.edu.
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