{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: The dominant role of extracellular polymeric substances produced by Achromobacter xylosoxidans BP1 in Cr(VI) microbial reduction. {Author}: Jia J;Xiao B;Yao L;Zhang B;Ma Y;Wang W;Han Y;Lei Q;Zhao R;Dong J;Wei N;Zhang H; {Journal}: Sci Total Environ {Volume}: 947 {Issue}: 0 {Year}: 2024 Jul 2 {Factor}: 10.753 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174464 {Abstract}: Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) have demonstrated significant benefits for reducing multivalent metal contamination. Using Achromobacter xylosoxidans BP1 isolated from a coal chemical site in China, this study elucidated the contribution of EPS production to Cr (VI) reduction and revealed its biological removal mechanism. BP1 grew at an optimum pH of 8 and the lowest inhibitory concentration of Cr(VI) was 300 mg/L. The spent medium completely removed Cr(VI), whereas resting cells were only able to remove 10.47 % and inactivated cells were nearly incapable of Cr(VI) removal. S-EPS and B-EPS reduced Cr(VI) by 98.59 % and 11.64 %, respectively. SEM-EDS analysis showed that the BP1 cells were stimulated to produce EPS under Cr stress. The XPS results showed that 29.63 % of Cr(VI) was enriched by intracellular bioaccumulation or biosorption and 70.37 % of Cr(VI) was reduced by extracellular enzymes to produce Cr(OH)3 and organic Cr(III) complexes. According to FTIR, EPS with -OH, COO-, and amide groups supplied binding sites and electrons for the reductive adsorption of Cr(VI). Genomic studies showed that BP1 primarily produces extracellular polysaccharides, metabolises sulphur and nitrogen, and reduces reactive oxygen species damage as a result of DNA repair proteases.