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Microbial arsenic: from geocycles to genes and enzymes.

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TLDR
The DNA sequencing and protein crystal structures have established the convergent evolution of three classes of arsenate reductases, which involve three cysteine thiols and S-As bond intermediates, so convergence evolution to similar mechanisms has taken place.
Abstract
Arsenic compounds have been abundant at near toxic levels in the environment since the origin of life. In response, microbes have evolved mechanisms for arsenic resistance and enzymes that oxidize As(III) to As(V) or reduce As(V) to As(III). Formation and degradation of organoarsenicals, for example methylarsenic compounds, occur. There is a global arsenic geocycle, where microbial metabolism and mobilization (or immobilization) are important processes. Recent progress in studies of the ars operon (conferring resistance to As(III) and As(V)) in many bacterial types (and related systems in Archaea and yeast) and new understanding of arsenite oxidation and arsenate reduction by respiratory-chain-linked enzyme complexes has been substantial. The DNA sequencing and protein crystal structures have established the convergent evolution of three classes of arsenate reductases (that is classes of arsenate reductases are not of common evolutionary origin). Proposed reaction mechanisms in each case involve three cysteine thiols and S–As bond intermediates, so convergent evolution to similar mechanisms has taken place.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Ecology of Arsenic

TL;DR: This work reviews what is known about arsenic-metabolizing bacteria and their potential impact on speciation and mobilization of arsenic in nature and investigates their role in aquifers.
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Efflux‐mediated heavy metal resistance in prokaryotes

TL;DR: The complement of efflux systems of 63 sequenced prokaryotes was compared with that of the heavy metal resistant bacterium Ralstonia metallidurans and showed that heavy metal resistance is the result of multiple layers of resistance systems with overlapping substrate specificities, but unique functions.
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Biochemistry of arsenic detoxification

TL;DR: While the overall schemes for arsenic resistance are similar in prokaryotes and eukaryotes, some of the specific proteins are the products of separate evolutionary pathways.
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Microbial reduction of metals and radionuclides.

TL;DR: This review focuses on recent research on the reduction of a wide range of metals including Fe(III), Mn(IV) and other more toxic metals and metalloids including As(V) and Se(VI) and radionuclides and possible biotechnological applications that could utilise these activities.
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Arsenic and selenium in microbial metabolism.

TL;DR: This review highlights recent advances in ecology, biochemistry, and molecular biology and provides a prelude to the impact of genomics studies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

BACTERIAL HEAVY METAL RESISTANCE: New Surprises

TL;DR: The first bacterial metallothionein cation-binding proteins, which by definition is a small protein that binds metal cations by means of numerous cysteine thiolates, has been characterized in cyanobacteria.
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Arsenic in Ground Water of the United States: Occurrence and Geochemistry

TL;DR: Arsenic release from iron oxide appears to be the most common cause of widespread arsenic concentrations exceeding 10 μg/L in ground water This can occur in response to different geochemical conditions, including release of arsenic to ground water through reaction of iron oxide with either natural or anthropogenic (i, petroleum products) organic carbon Iron oxide also can release arsenic to alkaline ground water, such as that found in some felsic volcanic rocks and alkaline aquifers of the western United States.
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Bacterial respiration of arsenic and selenium.

TL;DR: The detection of arsenate and selenate respiring bacteria in numerous pristine and contaminated environments and their rapid appearance in enrichment culture suggest that they are widespread and metabolically active in nature.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Tat protein export pathway

TL;DR: Recent progress on the characterization of the Tat system is reviewed and the structure and operation of this major new bacterial protein export pathway is critically discussed.
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Microbial Methylation of Metalloids: Arsenic, Antimony, and Bismuth

TL;DR: As described in this review, many microorganisms (bacteria, fungi, and yeasts) and animals are now known to biomethylate arsenic, forming both volatile and nonvolatile compounds, including methylarsines and trimethylstibine.
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