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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Apr 1997, 1344-1348, Vol 63, No. 4
RT Espejo and J Romero
Most copper bioleaching plants operate with a high concentration of sulfate
salts caused by the continuous addition of sulfuric acid and the recycling
of the leaching solution. Since the bacteria involved in bioleaching have
been generally isolated at low sulfate concentrations, the bacterial
population in ores leached with the high-sulfate solution (1.25 M) employed
in a copper production plant was investigated. The complexity of the
original population was assessed by the length pattern of the spacer
regions between the 16S and 23S rRNA genes, observed after PCR
amplification of the DNA extracted from the leached ore. Six main spacers
were distinguished by electrophoretic migration, but they could be further
resolved into eight spacers by nucleotide sequence homology. The degree of
homology was inferred from the electrophoretic migration of the
heteroduplexes formed after hybridization. One of the spacers was
indistinguishable from that found in Thiobacillus thiooxidans, four could
be related to Thiobacillus ferrooxidans, and three could be related to
Leptospirillum ferrooxidans. Only five of the spacers in the original
sample could be recovered after culturing in media containing different
inorganic energy source. Altogether, the results indicate that the bacteria
in the leached ore formed a community composed of at least three species: a
fairly homogeneous population of T. thiooxidans strains and two
heterogeneous populations of T. ferrooxidans and L. ferrooxidans strains.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Bacterial Community in Copper Sulfide Ores Inoculated and Leached with Solution from a Commercial-Scale Copper Leaching Plant
SMP-Tecnologia, Santiago, Chile
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