• Home
  • About Us
    • Brief Introduction
    • Address from the Director
    • Directors
    • Organization
    • IUE in Media
  • Scientists
    • Academicians
    • Professors
    • Associate Professors
  • Research
    • Research Divisions
    • Research Progress
  • Education
    • Admission
    • Study at IUE
    • Scholarships
  • INT'L Cooperation
    • INT'L Cooperation News
    • Partnership
  • Papers
  • Join Us
    • Job Opportunities
    • PIFI
      • What's PIFI
Contact Us   |   Sitemap   |   CAS   |   中文
Contact Us   |   Sitemap   |   CAS   |   中文
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Brief Introduction
    • Address from the Director
    • Directors
    • Organization
    • IUE in Media
  • Scientists
    • Academicians
    • Professors
    • Associate Professors
  • Research
    • Research Divisions
    • Research Progress
  • Education
    • Admission
    • Study at IUE
    • Scholarships
  • INT'L Cooperation
    • INT'L Cooperation News
    • Partnership
  • Papers
  • Join Us
    • Job Opportunities
    • PIFI

Papers

  • HomePapers
  • Papers
    Effects of Arsenic on Gut Microbiota and Its Biotransformation Genes in Earthworm Metaphire sieboldi
    Hong-Tao Wang, Dong Zhu, Gang Li, Fei Zheng, Jing Ding, Patrick J O’Connor, Yong-Guan Zhu, and Xi-Mei Xue*

    Arsenic biotransformation mediated by gut microbiota can affect arsenic bioavailability and microbial community. Arsenic species, arsenic biotransformation genes (ABGs), and the composition of gut microbial community were characterized after the earthworm Metaphire sieboldi was cultured in soils spiked with different arsenic concentrations. Arsenite (As(III)) was the major component in the earthworm gut, whereas arsenate (As(V)) was predominant in the soil. A total of 16 ABGs were quantified by high-throughput quantitative polymerase chain reaction (HT-qPCR). Genes involved in arsenic redox and efflux were predominant in all samples, and the abundance of ABGs involved in arsenic methylation and demethylation in the gut was very low. These results reveal that the earthworm gut can be a reservoir of microbes with the capability of reducing As(V) and extruding As(III) but with little methylation of arsenic. Moreover, gut microbial communities were dominated by Actinobacteria, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria at the phylum level and were considerably different from those in the surrounding soil. Our work demonstrates that exposure to As(V) disturbs the gut microbiota of earthworms and provides some insights into arsenic biotransformation in the earthworm gut.

     

    (A) Heat maps of ABGs in soil and gut samples. (B) Normalized abundance of ABGs per bacterial cell. The data are presented as the mean value ± standard error (SE) (n=3).

    Key words:Arsenic speciation;gut microbiota; Arsenic Biotransformation Genes

    Volume:53

    Page:3841–3849

    Journal:ENVIRON.SCI.TECHNOL.

    https://pubs.acs.org.ccindex.cn/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.8b06695

    About Us

    • Brief Introduction
    • Address from the Director
    • Directors
    • Organization
    • IUE in Media

    Scientists

    • Academicians
    • Professors
    • Associate Professors

    Research

    • Research Divisions
    • Research Progress

    Education

    • Admission
    • Study at IUE
    • Scholarships

    INT'L Cooperation

    • INT'L Cooperation News
    • Partnership

    Papers

    Join Us

    • Job Opportunities
    • PIFI
    Copyright © Institute of Urban Environment,Chinese Academy of Sciences. All Rights Reserved.
    1799 Jimei Road, Xiamen 361021 China.+86-592-6190973.