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. 2003 Feb;5(2):133-8.
doi: 10.1046/j.1462-2920.2003.00386.x.

Testing the limits of biological tolerance to arsenic in a fungus isolated from the River Tinto

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Testing the limits of biological tolerance to arsenic in a fungus isolated from the River Tinto

David Cánovas et al. Environ Microbiol. 2003 Feb.

Abstract

The Tinto river in Spain, with its high acidity and heavy metal concentrations (As, Cu, Cr, Zn), is an example of an environment hostile to life. Yet despite these extreme conditions, the site possesses a great diversity of eukaryotic life forms. We report the isolation of a filamentous fungus able to grow at 200 mM arsenic ( approximately 15 000 p.p.m.), i.e. a concentration 20-fold above that withstood by the reference microorganisms Escherichia coli, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Aspergillus nidulans, and 200 times greater than that tolerated by Aspergillus niger. Based on morphological, physiological and genotypic criteria, the strain belongs to the genus Aspergillus. High concentrations of the metalloid induced vacuolation, suggesting that this organelle is someway connected to arsenic tolerance. Concentrations that are lethal to other organisms do not stress Aspergillus sp. P37. The fungus was capable of removing arsenic from culture media. In addition to arsenic hyper-resistance, it also displayed a polyresistant phenotype to copper and chromium.

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