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Role of pure and mixed cultures of gram-positive eubacteria in mineral leaching

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2001 Johnson et_al_PP_Biohydromettalurgy.pdf47.23 KBAdobe PDF Download

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Research on the biooxidation of sulfidic minerals has tended to be heavily biased towards Gram-negative bacteria, such as Leptospirillum ferrooxidans and Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans. Currently, just three species of mineral-oxidising Gram-positive bacteria are recognised: Sulfobacillus thermosulfidooxidans, Sulfobacillus acidophilus and Acidimicrobium (Am.) ferrooxidans, all of which are thermotolerant prokaryotes. We have isolated and characterised a number of phylogenetically distinct Gram-positive ironmetabolising bacteria, including mesophilic and moderately thermophilic strains. Mesophilic isolates include (i) novel Sulfobacillus spp., some of which are the more acidophilic than all known iron-oxidising bacteria, (ii) "Ferrimicrobium acidiphilum", an actinobacterium most closely related to Am. ferrooxidans, and (iii) a group of low GC Gram-positives which appear to represent a novel genus. Moderately thermophilic isolates include a novel Sulfobacillus sp., an Alicyclobacillus spp. that, in contrast to currently recognised species, grows anaerobically by reduction of ferric iron and thrives in mineral leaching environments, and a new genus/species of iron- and sulfur-oxidising bacterium with the proposed name "Caldibacillus ferrivorus". These novel prokaryotes exhibited varying degrees of mineral leaching efficiencies, with the mesophilic Sulfobacillus spp. being particularly adept at solubilising pyrite at very low (<1) pH values. All novel Gram-positive isolates catalysed the oxidative dissolution of pyrite at lower redox potentials than Gram-negative mesophiles. Mixed cultures of Gram-positive bacteria, either with other Gram-positives or with Gram-negative bacteria, were often more effective mineral-leaching systems than corresponding pure cultures.

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Environmental microbiology Pyrite leaching Bacterial consortia

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