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1.
The strain Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP is able to degrade atrazine as a sole nitrogen source and therefore needs a single source for both carbon and energy for growth. In addition to the typical C source for Pseudomonas, Na(2)-succinate, the strain can also grow with phenol as a carbon source. Phenol is oxidized to catechol by a multicomponent phenol hydroxylase. Catechol is degraded via the ortho pathway using catechol 1,2-dioxygenase. It was possible to stimulate the strain in order to degrade very high concentrations of phenol (1,000 mg/liter) and atrazine (150 mg/liter) simultaneously. With cyanuric acid, the major intermediate of atrazine degradation, as an N source, both the growth rate and the phenol degradation rate were similar to those measured with ammonia as an N source. With atrazine as an N source, the growth rate and the phenol degradation rate were reduced to approximately 35% of those obtained for cyanuric acid. This presents clear evidence that although the first three enzymes of the atrazine degradation pathway are constitutively present, either these enzymes or the uptake of atrazine is the bottleneck that diminishes the growth rate of Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP with atrazine as an N source. Whereas atrazine and cyanuric acid showed no significant toxic effect on the cells, phenol reduces growth and activates or induces typical membrane-adaptive responses known for the genus Pseudomonas. Therefore Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP is an ideal bacterium for the investigation of the regulatory interactions among several catabolic genes and stress response mechanisms during the simultaneous degradation of toxic phenolic compounds and a xenobiotic N source such as atrazine.  相似文献   

2.
Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP uses the herbicide atrazine as the sole nitrogen source. We have devised a simple atrazine degradation assay to determine the effect of other nitrogen sources on the atrazine degradation pathway. The atrazine degradation rate was greatly decreased in cells grown on nitrogen sources that support rapid growth of Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP compared to cells cultivated on growth-limiting nitrogen sources. The presence of atrazine in addition to the nitrogen sources did not stimulate degradation. High degradation rates obtained in the presence of ammonium plus the glutamine synthetase inhibitor MSX and also with an Nas mutant derivative grown on nitrate suggest that nitrogen regulation operates by sensing intracellular levels of some key nitrogen-containing metabolite. Nitrate amendment in soil microcosms resulted in decreased atrazine mineralization by the wild-type strain but not by the Nas mutant. This suggests that, although nitrogen repression of the atrazine catabolic pathway may have a strong impact on atrazine biodegradation in nitrogen-fertilized soils, the use of selected mutant variants may contribute to overcoming this limitation.  相似文献   

3.
Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP initiates atrazine catabolism via three enzymatic steps, encoded by atzA, -B, and -C, which yield cyanuric acid, a nitrogen source for many bacteria. In-well lysis, Southern hybridization, and plasmid transfer studies indicated that the atzA, -B, and -C genes are localized on a 96-kb self-transmissible plasmid, pADP-1, in Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. High-performance liquid chromatography analyses showed that cyanuric acid degradation was not encoded by pADP-1. pADP-1 was transferred to Escherichia coli strains at a frequency of 4.7 × 10−2. This suggests a potential molecular mechanism for the dispersion of the atzABC genes to other soil bacteria.  相似文献   

4.
Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP contains the genes, atzA, -B, and -C, that encode three enzymes which metabolize atrazine to cyanuric acid. Atrazine-catabolizing pure cultures isolated from around the world contain genes homologous to atzA, -B, and -C. The present study was conducted to determine whether the same genes are present in an atrazine-catabolizing bacterial consortium and how the genes and metabolism are subdivided among member species. The consortium contained four or more bacterial species, but two members, Clavibacter michiganese ATZ1 and Pseudomonas sp. strain CN1, collectively mineralized atrazine. C. michiganese ATZ1 released chloride from atrazine, produced hydroxyatrazine, and contained a homolog to the atzA gene that encoded atrazine chlorohydrolase. C. michiganese ATZ1 stoichiometrically metabolized hydroxyatrazine to N-ethylammelide and contained genes homologous to atzB and atzC, suggesting that either a functional AtzB or -C catalyzed N-isopropylamine release from hydroxyatrazine. C. michiganese ATZ1 grew on isopropylamine as its sole carbon and nitrogen source, explaining the ability of the consortium to use atrazine as the sole carbon and nitrogen source. A second consortium member, Pseudomonas sp. strain CN1, metabolized the N-ethylammelide produced by C. michiganese ATZ1 to transiently form cyanuric acid, a reaction catalyzed by AtzC. A gene homologous to the atzC gene of Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP was present, as demonstrated by Southern hybridization and PCR. Pseudomonas sp. strain CN1, but not C. michiganese, metabolized cyanuric acid. The consortium metabolized atrazine faster than did C. michiganese individually. Additionally, the consortium metabolized a much broader set of triazine ring compounds than did previously described pure cultures in which the atzABC genes had been identified. These data begin to elucidate the genetic and metabolic bases of catabolism by multimember consortia.  相似文献   

5.
Strain DNS10 was the only member that could utilize atrazine as the sole nitrogen source for growth in an atrazine-degrading consortium which was isolated from black soil previously in our laboratory. It belongs to the genus Arthrobacter according to the sequence of 16S rRNA gene and is designated as Arthrobacter sp. DNS10. 16S rRNA gene phylogenetic analysis showed that strain DNS10 was located in a different evolutionary branch comparing with other Arthrobacter sp. atrazine-degrading strains. The degrading genes such as trzN, atzB and atzC harbored in strain DNS10 revealed high sequence similarity with those in Arthrobacter aurescens TC1 and Pseudomonas sp. ADP. These genes enabled the strain DNS10 to decompose atrazine to cyanuric acid. This was further proved by the results that the strain DNS10 (108 CFU mL−1) could degrade the whole atrazine (100 mg L−1) in the medium within 24 h at 30 °C and there was 66.13 ± 2.11 mg L−1 cyanuric acid accumulated at 24 h. These results imply that the strain DNS10 seems to be an excellent atrazine-degrading strain. Furthermore, this paper helps us in the better understanding of the strain evolution by comparing the metabolic ability and gene characteristics of strain DNS10 with other geographically distinct atrazine-degrading strains.  相似文献   

6.
Cyanuric acid hydrolase (AtzD) from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP was purified to homogeneity. Of 22 cyclic amides and triazine compounds tested, only cyanuric acid and N-methylisocyanuric acid were substrates. Other cyclic amidases were found not to hydrolyze cyanuric acid. Ten bacteria that use cyanuric acid as a sole nitrogen source for growth were found to contain either atzD or trzD, but not both genes.  相似文献   

7.
Electrospun hollow polymeric microfibers (microtubes) were evaluated as an encapsulation method for the atrazine degrading bacterium Pseudomonas sp. ADP. Pseudomonas sp. ADP cells were successfully incorporated in a formulation containing a core solution of polyethylene oxide dissolved in water and spun with an outer shell solution made of polycaprolactone and polyethylene glycol dissolved in a chloroform and dimethylformamide. The resulting microtubes, collected as mats, were partially collapsed with a ribbon-like structure. Following encapsulation, the atrazine degradation rate was low (0.03?±?0.01?mg atrazine/h/g fiber) indicating that the electrospinning process negatively affected cell activity. Atrazine degradation was restored to 0.5?±?0.1?mg atrazine/h/g fiber by subjecting the microtubes to a period of growth. After 3 and 7?days growth periods, encapsulated cells were able to remove 20.6?±?3 and 47.6?±?5.9?mg atrazine/g mat, respectively, in successive batches under non-growth conditions (with no additional electron donor) until atrazine was detected in the medium. The loss of atrazine degrading capacity was regained following an additional cell-growth period.  相似文献   

8.
Three bacterial strains capable of degrading atrazine were isolated from Manfredi soils (Argentine) using enrichment culture techniques. These soils were used to grow corn and were treated with atrazine for weed control during 3 years. The strains were nonmotile Gram-positive bacilli which formed cleared zones on atrazine solid medium, and the 16S rDNA sequences indicated that they were Arthrobacter sp. strains. The atrazine-degrading activity of the isolates was characterized by the ability to grow with atrazine as the sole nitrogen source, the concomitant herbicide disappearance, and the chloride release. The atrazine-degrader strain Pseudomonas sp. ADP was used for comparative purposes. According to the results, all of the isolates used atrazine as sole source of nitrogen, and sucrose and sodium citrate as the carbon sources for growth. HPLC analyses confirmed herbicide clearance. PCR analysis revealed the presence of the atrazine catabolic genes trzN, atzB, and atzC. The results of this work lead to a better understanding of microbial degradation activity in order to consider the potential application of the isolated strains in bioremediation of atrazine-polluted agricultural soils in Argentina.  相似文献   

9.
Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP utilizes the human-made s-triazine herbicide atrazine as the sole nitrogen source. The results reported here demonstrate that atrazine and the atrazine degradation intermediates N-isopropylammelide and cyanuric acid are chemoattractants for strain ADP. In addition, the nonmetabolized s-triazine ametryn was also an attractant. The chemotactic response to these s-triazines was not specifically induced during growth with atrazine, and atrazine metabolism was not required for the chemotactic response. A cured variant of strain ADP (ADP M13-2) was attracted to s-triazines, indicating that the atrazine catabolic plasmid pADP-1 is not necessary for the chemotactic response and that atrazine degradation and chemotaxis are not genetically linked. These results indicate that atrazine and related s-triazines are detected by one or more chromosomally encoded chemoreceptors in Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. We demonstrated that Escherichia coli is attracted to the s-triazine compounds N-isopropylammelide and cyanuric acid, and an E. coli mutant lacking Tap (the pyrimidine chemoreceptor) was unable to respond to s-triazines. These data indicate that pyrimidines and triazines are detected by the same chemoreceptor (Tap) in E. coli. We showed that Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP is attracted to pyrimidines, which are the naturally occurring structures closest to triazines, and propose that chemotaxis toward s-triazines may be due to fortuitous recognition by a pyrimidine chemoreceptor in Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. In competition assays, the presence of atrazine inhibited chemotaxis of Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP to cytosine, and cytosine inhibited chemotaxis to atrazine, suggesting that pyrimidines and s-triazines are detected by the same chemoreceptor.Atrazine [2-chloro-4-(N-ethylamino)-6-(N-isopropylamino)-1,3,5-s-triazine] is a human-made herbicide that is used worldwide to control broadleaf and grassy weeds. As one of the most heavily used herbicides in the United States, atrazine can be present in parts per million in agricultural runoffs (3), which exceeds the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency''s maximum allowable contaminant level of 3 ppb in ground and surface waters (13). Atrazine is persistent in soil (34) and was once considered nontoxic to animals. However, recent studies have shown that atrazine causes sexual abnormalities in frogs (21, 22, 50), reduced testosterone production in rats (53), and elevated levels of prostate cancer in workers at an atrazine-manufacturing factory (45). These studies suggest that there is cause for concern about atrazine residues in soil, groundwater, and surface waters.Several bacterial strains capable of mineralizing atrazine have been isolated (4, 27, 41, 49, 51, 52, 58). The best-studied atrazine-degrading strain, Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP (atrazine degrading pseudomonad), was isolated from an atrazine spill site in Minnesota (27). Strain ADP utilizes atrazine as a sole nitrogen source and mineralizes it in the process (27). The pathway of atrazine degradation in strain ADP has been characterized in detail (Fig. (Fig.1),1), and the genes encoding the six enzymes required for atrazine degradation have been cloned and sequenced (5, 7, 9, 10, 29, 42). The six genes are located in four distant locations on the atrazine catabolic plasmid (pADP-1) present in strain ADP (10, 29). atzA, atzB, and atzC, which encode the first three enzymes of the pathway, are constitutively expressed and highly conserved in atrazine-degrading bacteria isolated from geographically distinct locations (8, 11). Products of the atzDEF gene cluster catalyze the last three steps of atrazine degradation. This operon is divergently transcribed from atzR, the product of which has high homology to LysR-type regulatory proteins (29). AtzR and the inducer cyanuric acid are required for the expression of the atzDEF operon (14), and the operon is also subject to nitrogen control (15).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Pathway of atrazine degradation in Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP (reviewed in reference 55).In a study investigating the bioavailability of atrazine, Park et al. provided evidence that two atrazine-degrading strains, Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP and Agrobacterium radiobacter J14a, were chemotactically attracted to atrazine (38). Chemotaxis, the ability of motile bacteria to detect and respond to specific chemicals, can help bacteria find an optimal niche for their survival and growth and may play a role in the efficient degradation of pollutants in the environment (33, 37). Chemotaxis has been shown to enhance naphthalene biodegradation in both a heterogeneous aqueous system (30) and a non-aqueous-phase liquid system (24). In addition, a chemotactic naphthalene-degrading strain caused a higher rate of naphthalene desorption than was observed with nonchemotactic and nonmotile strains (24). Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP and recombinant strains expressing atz genes have been used to remove atrazine from soil in laboratory and field scale experiments (32, 48). If chemotaxis can enhance bioavailability in environments where the chemicals are sorbed to particles, the use of a motile chemotactic strain for bioremediation would be advantageous. Aside from the practical implications of atrazine chemotaxis, we are interested in understanding the evolution of a chemotactic response to a human-made chemical that was initially synthesized just 50 years ago (23). The results reported here indicate that Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP is chemotactically attracted to atrazine, atrazine metabolites, and the nonmetabolizable structural analog ametryn. The chemotactic response is not induced during growth with atrazine in strain ADP and does not require atrazine metabolism. We demonstrated that a single chemoreceptor (Tap) mediates chemotaxis to s-triazines and structurally similar pyrimidines in Escherichia coli. Additionally, we found that Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP is attracted to pyrimidines. In competition assays, cytosine inhibited atrazine chemotaxis, and vice versa. We therefore concluded that pyrimidines and s-triazines are detected by a single chemoreceptor in Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP.  相似文献   

10.
Bacterial atrazine catabolism is initiated by the enzyme atrazine chlorohydrolase (AtzA) in Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. Other triazine herbicides are metabolized by bacteria, but the enzymological basis of this is unclear. Here we begin to address this by investigating the catalytic activity of AtzA by using substrate analogs. Purified AtzA from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP catalyzed the hydrolysis of an atrazine analog that was substituted at the chlorine substituent by fluorine. AtzA did not catalyze the hydrolysis of atrazine analogs containing the pseudohalide azido, methoxy, and cyano groups or thiomethyl and amino groups. Atrazine analogs with a chlorine substituent at carbon 2 and N-alkyl groups, ranging in size from methyl to t-butyl, all underwent dechlorination by AtzA. AtzA catalyzed hydrolytic dechlorination when one nitrogen substituent was alkylated and the other was a free amino group. However, when both amino groups were unalkylated, no reaction occurred. Cell extracts were prepared from five strains capable of atrazine dechlorination and known to contain atzA or closely homologous gene sequences: Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP, Rhizobium strain PATR, Alcaligenes strain SG1, Agrobacterium radiobacter J14a, and Ralstonia picketti D. All showed identical substrate specificity to purified AtzA from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. Cell extracts from Clavibacter michiganensis ATZ1, which also contains a gene homologous to atzA, were able to transform atrazine analogs containing pseudohalide and thiomethyl groups, in addition to the substrates used by AtzA from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. This suggests that either (i) another enzyme(s) is present which confers the broader substrate range or (ii) the AtzA itself has a broader substrate range.  相似文献   

11.
Studies were carried out to understand parallel survival of two strains when cultivated as co-culture on a single carbon source in continuous cultivation. Strains used were Pseudomonas sp. strain CF600 that is reported for degradation of phenol; and HKR1 a lab strain, which was isolated from a site contaminated with phenol. In continuous cultivation Pseudomonas sp. CF600 showed an accumulation of colored intermediate, 2-hydroxy muconic semialdehyde (HMS), when fed with phenol as a sole source of carbon under dissolved oxygen limiting condition (40% saturation level). Under the same cultivation condition when it was co-cultured with strain HKR1, complete degradation of phenol was observed with no accumulation of intermediate. Different dilution rates (0.03, 0.15, and 0.30) were set in the bioreactor during cultivation. It was also observed that both the strains follow a typical cell density ratio of 1:18 as strain HKR1: Pseudomonas sp. CF600 irrespective of the dilution rates used in the study to favor degradation of phenol. Pseudomonas sp. CF600 is reported to degrade phenol via a plasmid-encoded pathway (pVI150). The enzymes for this meta-cleavage pathway are clustered on 15 genes encoded by a single operon, the dmp operon. PCR using primers from the different catabolic loci of dmp operon, demonstrated that the strain HKR1 follows a different metabolic pathway for intermediate utilization.  相似文献   

12.
Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP metabolizes atrazine to cyanuric acid via three plasmid-encoded enzymes, AtzA, AtzB, and AtzC. The first enzyme, AtzA, catalyzes the hydrolytic dechlorination of atrazine, yielding hydroxyatrazine. The second enzyme, AtzB, catalyzes hydroxyatrazine deamidation, yielding N-isopropylammelide. In this study, the third gene in the atrazine catabolic pathway, atzC, was cloned from a Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP cosmid library as a 25-kb EcoRI DNA fragment in Escherichia coli. The atzC gene was further delimited by functional analysis following transposon Tn5 mutagenesis and subcloned as a 2.0-kb EcoRI-AvaI fragment. An E. coli strain containing this DNA fragment expressed N-isopropylammelide isopropylamino hydrolase activity, metabolizing N-isopropylammelide stoichiometrically to cyanuric acid and N-isopropylamine. The 2.0-kb DNA fragment was sequenced and found to contain a single open reading frame of 1,209 nucleotides, encoding a protein of 403 amino acids. AtzC showed modest sequence identity of 29 and 25%, respectively, to cytosine deaminase and dihydroorotase, both members of an amidohydrolase protein superfamily. The sequence of AtzC was compared to that of E. coli cytosine deaminase in the regions containing the five ligands to the catalytically important metal for the protein. Pairwise comparison of the 35 amino acids showed 61% sequence identity and 85% sequence similarity. AtzC is thus assigned to the amidohydrolase protein family that includes cytosine deaminase, urease, adenine deaminase, and phosphotriester hydrolase. Similar sequence comparisons of the most highly conserved regions indicated that the AtzA and AtzB proteins also belong to the same amidohydrolase family. Overall, the data suggest that AtzA, AtzB, and AtzC diverged from a common ancestor and, by random events, have been reconstituted onto an atrazine catabolic plasmid.  相似文献   

13.
《Process Biochemistry》2004,39(8):1001-1006
Thirty filamentous fungal strains were isolated from effluents of a stainless steel industry (Minas Gerais, Brazil) and tested for phenol tolerance. Fifteen strains of the genera Fusarium sp., Aspergillus sp., Penicillium sp. and Graphium sp. tolerants up to 10 mM of phenol were selected and tested for their ability to degrade phenol. Phenol degradation was a function of strain, time of incubation and initial phenol concentration. FIB4, LEA5 and AE2 strains of Graphium sp. and FE11 of Fusarium sp. presented the highest percentage phenol degradation, with 75% degradation of 10 mM phenol in 168 h for FIB4. A higher starting cell density of Graphium sp. FIB4 lead to a decrease in the time needed for full phenol degradation and increased the phenol degradation rate. All strains exhibited activity of catechol 1,2-dioxygenase and phenol hydroxylase in free cell extracts obtained from cells grown on phenol, suggesting that catechol was oxidized by the ortho type of ring fission. These data reported demonstrate the prospect after the application of filamentous fungal strains in protecting the environment from phenol pollution.  相似文献   

14.
Lately, there has been a special interest in understanding the role of halophilic and halotolerant organisms for their ability to degrade hydrocarbons. The focus of this study was to investigate the genes and enzymes involved in the initial steps of the benzene degradation pathway in halophiles. The extremely halophilic bacteria Arhodomonas sp. strain Seminole and Arhodomonas sp. strain Rozel, which degrade benzene and toluene as the sole carbon source at high salinity (0.5 to 4 M NaCl), were isolated from enrichments developed from contaminated hypersaline environments. To obtain insights into the physiology of this novel group of organisms, a draft genome sequence of the Seminole strain was obtained. A cluster of 13 genes predicted to be functional in the hydrocarbon degradation pathway was identified from the sequence. Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry were used to corroborate the role of the predicted open reading frames (ORFs). ORFs 1080 and 1082 were identified as components of a multicomponent phenol hydroxylase complex, and ORF 1086 was identified as catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (2,3-CAT). Based on this analysis, it was hypothesized that benzene is converted to phenol and then to catechol by phenol hydroxylase components. The resulting catechol undergoes ring cleavage via the meta pathway by 2,3-CAT to form 2-hydroxymuconic semialdehyde, which enters the tricarboxylic acid cycle. To substantiate these findings, the Rozel strain was grown on deuterated benzene, and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry detected deuterated phenol as the initial intermediate of benzene degradation. These studies establish the initial steps of the benzene degradation pathway in halophiles.  相似文献   

15.
Wastewater from atrazine manufacturing plants contains large amounts of residual atrazine and atrazine synthesis products, which must be removed before disposal. One of the obstacles to biological treatment of these wastewaters is their high salt content, eg, up to 4% NaCl (w/v). To enable biological treatment, bacteria capable of atrazine mineralization must be adapted to high-salinity conditions. A recently isolated atrazine-degrading bacterium, Pseudomonas sp strain ADP, originally isolated from contaminated soils was adapted to biodegradation of atrazine at salt concentrations relevant to atrazine manufacturing wastewater. The adaptation mechanism was based on the ability of the bacterium to produce trehalose as its main osmolyte. Trehalose accumulation was confirmed by natural-abundance 1H NMR spectral analysis. The bacterium synthesized trehalose de novo in the cells, but could not utilize trehalose added to the growth medium. Interestingly, the bacterium could not produce glycine betaine (a common compatible solute), but addition of 1 mM of glycine betaine to the medium induced salt tolerance. Osmoregulated Pseudomonas sp strain ADP, feeding on citrate decreased the concentration of atrazine in non-sterile authentic wastewater from 25 ppm to below 1 ppm in less than 2 days. The results of our study suggest that salt-adapted Pseudomonas sp strain ADP can be used for atrazine degradation in salt-containing wastewater. Received 26 August 1997/ Accepted in revised form 06 December 1997  相似文献   

16.
A Pseudomonas sp. strain, CP4, was isolated that used phenol up to 1.5 g/l as sole source of carbon and energy. Optimal growth on 1.5 g phenol/l was at pH 6.5 to 7.0 and 30°C. Unadapted cells needed 72 h to decrease the chemical oxygen demand (COD) of about 2000 mg/l (from 1 g phenol/l) to about 200 mg/l. Adapted cells, pregrown on phenol, required only 65 h to decrease the COD level to below 100 mg/l. Adaptation of cells to phenol also improved the degradation of cresols. Cell-free extracts of strain CP4 grown on phenol or o-, m- or p-cresol had sp. act. of 0.82, 0.35, 0.54 and 0.32 units of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase and 0.06, 0.05, 0.05 and 0.03 units of catechol 1,2-dioxygenase, respectively. Cells grown on glucose or succinate had neither activity. Benzoate and all isomers of cresol, creosote, hydroxybenzoates, catechol and methyl catechol were utilized by strain CP4. No chloroaromatic was degraded, either as sole substrate or as co-substrate.The authors are with the Department of Microbiology and Bioengineering, Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore-570 013, India  相似文献   

17.
In laboratory settings, the ability of bacteria and fungi to degrade many environmental contaminants is well proven. However, the potential of microbial inoculants in soil remediation has not often been realized because catabolically competent strains rarely survive and proliferate in soil, and even if they do, they usually fail to express their desired catabolic potential. One method to address the survival problem is formulating the microorganisms with physical and chemical support systems. This study investigates the survival of Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP in sterile soil and its retention of atrazine-degrading functionality. Assessment was conducted with free and zeolite-immobilized bacteria incorporated into the soil. Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP remained viable for at least 10 weeks when stored at 15°C in sterile soil. Cell numbers increased for both free and zeolite-immobilized bacteria during this period, except for free cells when grown in Miller's Luria-Bertani medium, which exhibited constant cell numbers over the 10 weeks. Only the zeolite-immobilized cell retained full functionality to degrade atrazine after 10 weeks in sterile soil regardless of the medium used to culture Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. Functionality was diminished in free-cell inoculations except when using an improved culture medium. Survival of zeolite-immobilized Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP separated from the soil matrix after 10 weeks’ incubation was significantly (p < .05) greater than in soil inoculated with free cells or in the soil fraction inoculated by release from zeolite-immobilized Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP.  相似文献   

18.
Arthrobacter nicotinovorans HIM was isolated directly from an agricultural sandy dune soil 6 months after a single application of atrazine. It grew in minimal medium with atrazine as sole nitrogen source but was unable to mineralize 14C-ring-labelled atrazine. Atrazine was degraded to cyanuric acid. In addition to atrazine the bacterium degraded simazine, terbuthylazine, propazine, cyanazine and prometryn but was unable to grow on terbumeton. When added to soil, A. nicotinovorans HIM did enhance mineralization of 14C-ring-labelled atrazine and simazine, in combination with naturally occurring cyanuric acid degrading microbes resident in the soil. Using PCR, the atrazine-degradation genes atzABC were identified in A. nicotinovorans HIM. Cloning of the atzABC genes revealed significant homology (>99%) with the atrazine degradation genes of Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP. The atrazine degradation genes were held on a 96 kbp plasmid.  相似文献   

19.
Improved Degradation of Monochlorophenols by a Constructed Strain   总被引:11,自引:6,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Pseudomonas sp. strain B13, a strain able to degrade 3-chlorobenzoate and, after prolonged adaptation (40 days), 4-chlorophenol, could transfer the ability to degrade chlorocatechols to a recipient, Alcaligenes sp. strain A7, which is able to grow with benzoate and phenol. Representative transconjugants, such as Alcaligenes sp. strain A7-2, were able to utilize all three isomeric chlorophenols; this property was not possessed by the donor or the recipient. The ability to grow readily with 4-chlorophenol may be attributable to a more rapid induction of phenol hydroxylase by Alcaligenes sp. strain A7-2 than by Pseudomonas sp. strain B13, a property which correlates with the greater level of resistance to chlorophenols shown by the transconjugant.  相似文献   

20.
Three bacterial strains utilizing 3-nitrotoluene (3-NT) as a sole source of carbon, nitrogen and energy were isolated from an industrial wastewater treatment plant. Biochemical tests and 16S rDNA sequence analysis revealed that the isolated strains belonged to Diaphorobacter sp. Detailed studies were carried out with Diaphorobacter sp. strain DS2. Degradation of 3-NT by Diaphorobacter sp. strain DS2 was accompanied by the release of nitrite in the culture broth with increase in biomass. Total organic carbon analysis confirmed the extensive mineralization of 3-NT. The strain could degrade 3-methylcatechol, 4-methylcatechol and catechol easily suggesting that the degradation pathway could involve these as possible intermediates. Successful PCR amplification of the oxygenase large subunit and the presence of high activity for catechol 2,3-dioxygenase in the crude cell lysate further confirmed that the degradation of 3-NT occurred through (methyl)catechol intermediates in strain DS2. The strain DS2 was found to degrade other isomers of mononitrotoluene (2-NT and 4-NT) and nitrobenzene as well.  相似文献   

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