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A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry

BACKGROUND: The interactions of microbes with metal ions form an important basis for our study of biotechnological applications. Despite the recent progress in studying some properties of Au(III) adsorption and reduction by Bacillus megatherium D01 biomass, there is still a need for additional data...

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Autores principales: Lin, Zhongyu, Ye, Yiwen, Li, Qiaoling, Xu, Zhenling, Wang, Miao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3305899/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22032692
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-11-98
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author Lin, Zhongyu
Ye, Yiwen
Li, Qiaoling
Xu, Zhenling
Wang, Miao
author_facet Lin, Zhongyu
Ye, Yiwen
Li, Qiaoling
Xu, Zhenling
Wang, Miao
author_sort Lin, Zhongyu
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The interactions of microbes with metal ions form an important basis for our study of biotechnological applications. Despite the recent progress in studying some properties of Au(III) adsorption and reduction by Bacillus megatherium D01 biomass, there is still a need for additional data on the molecular mechanisms of biosorbents responsible for their interactions with Au(III) to have a further insight and to make a better exposition. RESULTS: The biosorption mechanism of Au(III) onto the resting cell of Bacillus megatherium D01 biomass on a molecular level has been further studied here. The infrared (IR) spectroscopy on D01 biomass and that binding Au(III) demonstrates that the molecular recognition of and binding to Au(III) appear to occur mostly with oxygenous- and nitrogenous-active groups of polysaccharides and proteins in cell wall biopolymers, such as hydroxyl of saccharides, carboxylate anion of amino-acid residues (side-chains of polypeptide backbone), peptide bond (amide I and amide II bands), etc.; and that the active groups must serve as nucleation sites for Au(0) nuclei growth. A further investigation on the interactions of each of the soluble hydrolysates of D01, Bacillus licheniformis R08, Lactobacillus sp. strain A09 and waste Saccharomyces cerevisiae biomasses with Au(III) by IR spectrometry clearly reveals an essential biomacromolecule-characteristic that seems the binding of Au(III) to the oxygen of the peptide bond has caused a significant, molecular conformation-rearrangement in polypeptide backbones from β-pleated sheet to α-helices and/or β-turns of protein secondary structure; and that this changing appears to be accompanied by the occurrence, in the peptide bond, of much unbound -C=O and H-N- groups, being freed from the inter-molecular hydrogen-bonding of the β-pleated sheet and carried on the helical forms, as well as by the alternation in side chain steric positions of protein primary structure. This might be reasonably expected to result in higher-affinity interactions of peptide bond and side chains with Au(III). CONCLUSIONS: The evidence suggests that the polypeptides appear to be activated by the intervention of Au(III) via the molecular reconformation and in turn react upon Au(III) actively and exert profound impacts on the course of Au(0) nucleation and crystal growth.
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spelling pubmed-33058992012-03-16 A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry Lin, Zhongyu Ye, Yiwen Li, Qiaoling Xu, Zhenling Wang, Miao BMC Biotechnol Research Article BACKGROUND: The interactions of microbes with metal ions form an important basis for our study of biotechnological applications. Despite the recent progress in studying some properties of Au(III) adsorption and reduction by Bacillus megatherium D01 biomass, there is still a need for additional data on the molecular mechanisms of biosorbents responsible for their interactions with Au(III) to have a further insight and to make a better exposition. RESULTS: The biosorption mechanism of Au(III) onto the resting cell of Bacillus megatherium D01 biomass on a molecular level has been further studied here. The infrared (IR) spectroscopy on D01 biomass and that binding Au(III) demonstrates that the molecular recognition of and binding to Au(III) appear to occur mostly with oxygenous- and nitrogenous-active groups of polysaccharides and proteins in cell wall biopolymers, such as hydroxyl of saccharides, carboxylate anion of amino-acid residues (side-chains of polypeptide backbone), peptide bond (amide I and amide II bands), etc.; and that the active groups must serve as nucleation sites for Au(0) nuclei growth. A further investigation on the interactions of each of the soluble hydrolysates of D01, Bacillus licheniformis R08, Lactobacillus sp. strain A09 and waste Saccharomyces cerevisiae biomasses with Au(III) by IR spectrometry clearly reveals an essential biomacromolecule-characteristic that seems the binding of Au(III) to the oxygen of the peptide bond has caused a significant, molecular conformation-rearrangement in polypeptide backbones from β-pleated sheet to α-helices and/or β-turns of protein secondary structure; and that this changing appears to be accompanied by the occurrence, in the peptide bond, of much unbound -C=O and H-N- groups, being freed from the inter-molecular hydrogen-bonding of the β-pleated sheet and carried on the helical forms, as well as by the alternation in side chain steric positions of protein primary structure. This might be reasonably expected to result in higher-affinity interactions of peptide bond and side chains with Au(III). CONCLUSIONS: The evidence suggests that the polypeptides appear to be activated by the intervention of Au(III) via the molecular reconformation and in turn react upon Au(III) actively and exert profound impacts on the course of Au(0) nucleation and crystal growth. BioMed Central 2011-10-27 /pmc/articles/PMC3305899/ /pubmed/22032692 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-11-98 Text en Copyright ©2011 Lin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lin, Zhongyu
Ye, Yiwen
Li, Qiaoling
Xu, Zhenling
Wang, Miao
A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry
title A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry
title_full A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry
title_fullStr A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry
title_full_unstemmed A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry
title_short A further insight into the biosorption mechanism of Au(III) by infrared spectrometry
title_sort further insight into the biosorption mechanism of au(iii) by infrared spectrometry
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3305899/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22032692
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6750-11-98
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