Mtsd. Vasconcelos et al., COMPARISON OF AVAILABILITY OF COPPER(II) COMPLEXES WITH ORGANIC-LIGANDS TO BACTERIAL-CELLS AND TO CHITIN, Environmental toxicology and chemistry, 16(10), 1997, pp. 2029-2039
Bacterial cells or chitin were exposed to solutions with 100 mu M tota
l but only 5 mu M free copper, due to the presence of a proper concent
ration of proline, lysine, cysteine, or ethylenediamine tetraacetate (
EDTA). The influence of the nature and concentration of the particles
and soluble ligands, on the sorption and on the desorption of the copp
er, at pH 6.50 and 25.0 degrees C, was investigated. The metal sorbed
by the particles and that left in the solution were measured by atomic
absorption spectrometry, after different periods of contact between p
articles and solution. The interpretation of the results was based on
the copper(II) speciation calculated through equilibrium approaches ap
plied to homogenous or heterogeneous systems. A significant fraction o
f copper bound to the organic ligands was displaced to the bacteria or
chitin, and the extent of chemical reaction depended on the nature of
both the soluble (or leaving) ligands and sites on the particle surfa
ce (or entering ligands), as expected by the equilibrium theory. But w
ith chitin, the uptake of copper in the presence of cysteine or EDTA w
as higher than expected, which may be due to the adsorption of the sol
uble copper complexes on the particle surface. In consequence of a com
petition between soluble and particulate ligands (cells or chitin), th
e free copper(II) concentration decreased in the solution, even in the
presence of very strong chelators. The results indicate that copper a
vailability is not a simple function of the initial free copper concen
tration in the solution. Desorption of the previously fixed copper, or
iginated by free soluble ligands indicated that the sorption of copper
was ''quasireversible'' for both particles, though a larger dismissal
of the equilibrium position occurred for the cells, probably due to t
heir biological activity. Both the bacteria and chitin were able to fi
x metal initially bound to an organic ligand continuously for periods
longer than 30 min, the kinetics of uptake varying with the nature of
both the leaving and entering ligands. Therefore, long time-scale tech
niques, namely batch processes, warrant studies of metal availability
in natural systems.