Applied Sciences (Feb 2022)
Comparative Study of Roxarsone Reduction by <i>Shewanella oneidensis</i> MR-1 and <i>Cellulomonas</i> sp. Strain Cellu-2a
Abstract
Roxarsone, an organoarsenic compound, has been used extensively as an additive in poultry feed to promote animal growth. Although roxarsone is moderately toxic, it can be converted into more toxic compounds upon exposure to the environment, resulting in human health risks. This article reports on a comparative study of roxarsone reduction by fermentative, anaerobic Cellulomonas sp. Cellu-2a and a widely distributed metal-reducing bacterium, Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. The strain Cellu-2a showed a faster roxarsone reduction capability by fermentative growth than by MR-1 in anaerobic respiration. With an environmentally relevant mineral, hydrous ferric oxide (HFO) included in the incubations, there was a rather rapid abiotic (indirect, heterogeneous) reduction of roxarsone by the solid phase Fe(II) in HFO generated by reduction of Fe(III) of HFO by MR-1, while still direct reduction was major reaction by Cellu-2a even with HFO. This study provides evidence of direct and/or indirect bacterial reduction of roxarsone in fermentative conditions as well as in anaerobic respiration conditions, at exposure to the environment, which would assist understanding of environmental behaviors of roxarsone in biological settings with HFO, a naturally occurring ubiquitous mineral class.
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