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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2001, p. 3168-3173, Vol. 67, No. 7
Ralph M. Parsons Laboratory, Department of
Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139
Received 29 December 2000/Accepted 31 January 2001
A rapid and simple most-probable-number (MPN) procedure for the
enumeration of dissimilatory arsenic-reducing bacteria (DARB) is
presented. The method is based on the specific detection of arsenite,
the end product of anaerobic arsenate respiration, by a precipitation
reaction with sulfide. After 4 weeks of incubation, the medium for the
MPN method is acidified to pH 6 and sulfide is added to a final
concentration of about 1 mM. The brightly yellow arsenic trisulfide
precipitates immediately and can easily be scored at arsenite
concentrations as low as 0.05 mM. Abiotic reduction of arsenate upon
sulfide addition, which could yield false positives, apparently
produces a soluble As-S intermediate, which does not precipitate until
about 1 h after sulfide addition. Using the new MPN method,
population estimates of pure cultures of DARB were similar to direct
cell counts. MPNs of environmental water and sediment samples yielded
DARB numbers between 101 and 105 cells per ml
or gram (dry weight), respectively. Poisoned and sterilized controls
showed that potential abiotic reductants in environmental samples did
not interfere with the MPN estimates. A major advantage is that the
assay can be easily scaled to a microtiter plate format, enabling
analysis of large numbers of samples by use of multichannel pipettors.
Overall, the MPN method provides a rapid and simple means for
estimating population sizes of DARB, a diverse group of organisms for
which no comprehensive molecular markers have been developed yet.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.7.3168-3173.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Rapid and Simple Method for the
Most-Probable-Number Estimation of Arsenic-Reducing Bacteria
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Ralph M. Parsons
Laboratory, 48-421, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139. Phone: (617) 253-7128. Fax: (617) 258-8850. E-mail: mpolz{at}mit.edu.
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