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1.
Microbial dehalogenation of tetrachloroethene (PCE) and cis-dichloroethene (cis-DCE) was studied in cultures from a continuous stirred tank reactor initially inoculated with aquifer material from a PCE-contaminated site. Cultures amended with hydrogen and acetate readily dechlorinated PCE and cis-DCE; however, this transformation was incomplete and resulted in the accumulation of chlorinated intermediates and only small amounts of ethene within 60 days of incubation. Conversely, microbial PCE and cis-DCE dechlorination in cultures with benzoate and acetate resulted in the complete transformation to ethene within 30 days. Community fingerprinting by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) revealed the predominance of phylotypes closely affiliated with Desulfitobacterium, Dehalococcoides, and Syntrophus species. The Dehalococcoides culture VZ, obtained from small whitish colonies in cis-DCE dechlorinating agarose cultures, revealed an irregular cell diameter between 200 and 500 nm, and a spherical or biconcave disk-shaped morphology. These organisms were identified as responsible for the dechlorination of cis-DCE to ethene in the PCE-dechlorinating consortia, operating together with the Desulfitobacterium as PCE-to-cis-DCE dehalogenating bacterium and with a Syntrophus species as potential hydrogen-producing partner in cultures with benzoate. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.  相似文献   

2.
A major obstacle in the implementation of the reductive dechlorination process at chloroethene-contaminated sites is the accumulation of the intermediate vinyl chloride (VC), a proven human carcinogen. To shed light on the microbiology involved in the final critical dechlorination step, a sediment-free, nonmethanogenic, VC-dechlorinating enrichment culture was derived from tetrachloroethene (PCE)-to-ethene-dechlorinating microcosms established with material from the chloroethene-contaminated Bachman Road site aquifer in Oscoda, Mich. After 40 consecutive transfers in defined, reduced mineral salts medium amended with VC, the culture lost the ability to use PCE and trichloroethene (TCE) as metabolic electron acceptors. PCE and TCE dechlorination occurred in the presence of VC, presumably in a cometabolic process. Enrichment cultures supplied with lactate or pyruvate as electron donor dechlorinated VC to ethene at rates up to 54 μmol liter−1day−1, and dichloroethenes (DCEs) were dechlorinated at about 50% of this rate. The half-saturation constant (KS) for VC was 5.8 μM, which was about one-third lower than the concentrations determined for cis-DCE and trans-DCE. Similar VC dechlorination rates were observed at temperatures between 22 and 30°C, and negligible dechlorination occurred at 4 and 35°C. Reductive dechlorination in medium amended with ampicillin was strictly dependent on H2 as electron donor. VC-dechlorinating cultures consumed H2 to threshold concentrations of 0.12 ppm by volume. 16S rRNA gene-based tools identified a Dehalococcoides population, and Dehalococcoides-targeted quantitative real-time PCR confirmed VC-dependent growth of this population. These findings demonstrate that Dehalococcoides populations exist that use DCEs and VC but not PCE or TCE as metabolic electron acceptors.  相似文献   

3.
 Degradation of tetrachloroethene (perchloroethylene, PCE) was investigated by combining the metabolic abilities of anaerobic bacteria, capable of reductive dechlorination of PCE, with those of aerobic methanotrophic bacteria, capable of co-metabolic degradation of the less-chlorinated ethenes formed by reductive dechlorination of PCE. Anaerobic communities reductively dechlorinating PCE, trichloroethene (TCE) and dichloroethenes were enriched from various sources. The maximum rates of dechlorination observed for various chloroethenes in these batch enrichments were: PCE to TCE (341 μmol l-1 day-1), TCE to cis-dichloroethene (159 μmol l-1 day-1), cis-dichloroethene to chloroethene (99 μmol l-1 day-1) and trans-dichloroethene to chloroethene (22 μmol l-1 day-1). A mixture of these enrichments was inoculated into an anoxic fixed-bed upflow column. In this column PCE was converted mainly into cis-1, 2-dichloroethene, small amounts of TCE and chloroethene, and chloride. Enrichments of aerobic methanotrophic bacteria were grown in an oxic fixed-bed downflow column. Less-chlorinated ethenes, formed in the anoxic column, were further metabolized in this oxic methanotrophic column. On the basis of analysis of chloride production and the disappearance of chlorinated ethenes it was demonstrated that complete degradation of PCE was possible by combining these two columns. Operation of the two-column system under various process conditions indicated that the sensitivity of the methanotrophic bacteria to chlorinated intermediates represented the bottle-neck in the sequential anoxic/oxic degradation process of PCE. Received: 24 October 1994 / Received revision: 20 January 1995 / Accepted: 23 January 1995  相似文献   

4.

A strict anaerobic bacterium, Desulfitobacterium sp. strain Y51, is capable of very efficiently dechlorinating tetrachloroethene (PCE) via trichloroethene (TCE) to cis-1,2-dichloroethene (cis-DCE) at concentrations as high as 960 μM and as low as 0.06 μM. Dechlorination was highly susceptible to air oxidation and to potential alternative electron acceptors, such as nitrite, nitrate or sulfite. The PCE reductive dehalogenase (encoded by the pceA gene and abbreviated as PceA dehalogenase) of strain Y51 was purified and characterized. The purified enzyme catalyzed the reductive dechlorination of PCE to cis-DCE at a specific activity of 113.6 nmol min−1  mg protein−1 . The apparent K m values for PCE and TCE were 105.7 and 535.3 μM, respectively. In addition to PCE and TCE, the enzyme exhibited dechlorination activity for various chlorinated ethanes such as hexachloroethane, pentachloroethane, 1,1,1,2-tetrachloroethane and 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane. An 8.4-kb DNA fragment cloned from the Y51 genome revealed eight open reading frames, including the pceAB genes. Immunoblot analysis revealed that PceA dehalogenase is localized in the periplasm of Y51 cells. Production of PceA dehalogenase was induced upon addition of TCE. Significant growth inhibition of strain Y51 was observed in the presence of cis-DCE, More interestingly, the pce gene cluster was deleted with high frequency when the cells were grown with cis-DCE.

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5.
This study compares three molecular techniques, including terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP), RFLP analysis with clone sequencing, and quantitative PCR (Q-PCR) for surveying differences in microbial communities at two contaminated field sites that exhibit dissimilar chlorinated solvent degradation activities. At the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL), trichloroethene (TCE) was completely converted to ethene during biostimulation with lactate. At Seal Beach, California, perchloroethene (PCE) was degraded only to cis-dichloroethene (cDCE) during biostimulation but was degraded to ethene after bioaugmentation with a dechlorinating culture containing Dehalococcoides strains. T-RFLP analysis showed that microbial community composition differed significantly between the two sites, but was similar within each site among wells that had low or no electron donor exposure. Analysis of INEEL clone libraries by RFLP with clone sequencing revealed a complex microbial population but did not identify any Dehalococcoides strains. Q-PCR targeting the 16S rRNA gene of Dehalococcoides strains – known for their unique capability to dechlorinate solvents completely to ethene – revealed a significant population at INEEL, but no detectable population at Seal Beach prior to bioaugmentation. Detection of Dehalococcoides by Q-PCR correlated with observed dechlorination activity and ethene production at both sites. Q-PCR showed that Dehalococcoides was present in even the pristine well at INEEL, suggesting that the difference in dechlorination ability at the two sites was due to the initial absence of this genus at Seal Beach. Of the techniques tested, Q-PCR quantification of specific dechlorinating species provided the most effective and direct prediction of community dechlorinating potential.  相似文献   

6.
Members of the genera Desulfuromonas and Dehalococcoides reductively dechlorinate tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene. Two primer pairs specific to hypervariable regions of the 16S rRNA genes of the Dehalococcoides group (comprising Dehalococcoides ethenogenes and Dehalococcoides sp. strain FL2) and the acetate-oxidizing, PCE-dechlorinating Desulfuromonas group (comprising Desulfuromonas sp. strain BB1 and Desulfuromonas chloroethenica) were designed. The detection threshold of a nested PCR approach using universal bacterial primers followed by a second PCR with the Desulfuromonas dechlorinator-targeted primer pair was 1 × 103 BB1 cells added per gram (wet weight) of sandy aquifer material. Total community DNA isolated from sediments of three Michigan rivers and six different chloroethene-contaminated aquifer samples was used as template in nested PCR. All river sediment samples yielded positive signals with the BB1- and the Dehalococcoides-targeted primers. One chloroethene-contaminated aquifer tested positive with the Dehalococcoides-targeted primers, and another contaminated aquifer tested positive with the Desulfuromonas dechlorinator-targeted primer pair. Restriction fragment analysis of the amplicons could discriminate strain BB1 from other known Desulfuromonas species. Microcosm studies confirmed the presence of PCE-dechlorinating, acetate-oxidizing Desulfuromonas and hydrogenotrophic Dehalococcoides species in samples yielding positive PCR signals with the specific primers.  相似文献   

7.
Monod kinetics are the foundation of mathematical models of many environmentally important biological processes, including the dehalorespiration of chlorinated ethene groundwater contaminants. The Monod parameters—q max, the maximum specific substrate utilization rate, and K S, the half-saturation constant—are typically estimated in batch assays, which are superficially simple to prepare and maintain. However, if initial conditions in batch assays are not chosen carefully, it is unlikely that the estimated parameter values will be meaningful because they do not reflect microbial activity in the environmental system of interest, and/or they are not mathematically identifiable. The estimation of q max and K S values that are highly correlated undoubtedly contributes significantly to the wide range in reported parameter values and may undermine efforts to use mathematical models to demonstrate the occurrence of natural attenuation or predict the performance of engineered bioremediation approaches. In this study, a series of experimental and theoretical batch kinetic assays were conducted using the tetrachloroethene-respirer Desulfuromonas michiganensis to systematically evaluate the effects of initial batch assay conditions, expressed as the initial substrate (S 0)-to-initial biomass concentration (X 0) ratio (S 0/X 0) and the S 0/K S ratio on parameter correlation. An iterative approach to obtain meaningful Monod parameter estimates was developed and validated using three different strains and can be broadly applied to a range of other substrates and populations. While the S 0/X 0 ratio is critical to obtaining kinetic parameter estimates that reflect in situ microbial activity, this study shows that optimization of the S 0/K S ratio is key to minimizing Monod parameter correlation.  相似文献   

8.
A recombinant strain of Escherichia coli (JM109/pBZ1260) expressing constitutively toluene-o-xylene monooxygenase (ToMO) of Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1 degraded binary mixtures (100 microM each) of tetrachloroethylene (PCE) with either trichloroethylene (TCE), 1,1-dichloroethylene (1,1-DCE), cis-dichloroethylene (cis-DCE), trans-1,2-dichloroethylene (trans-DCE), or vinyl chloride (VC). PCE degradation was 8-20% for these binary mixtures, while TCE and trans-DCE with PCE were degraded at 19%, 1,1-DCE at 37%, cis-DCE at 97%, and VC at 27%. The host P. stutzeri OXI was also found to degrade binary mixtures of PCE/TCE, PCE/cis-DCE, and PCE/VC when induced with toluene. Degradation of quaternary mixtures of PCE/TCE/trans-DCE/VC and PCE/TCE/cis-DCE/VC by JM109/pBZ1260 were also investigated as well as mixtures of PCE/TCE/trans-DCE/1,1-DCE/cis-DCE/VC; when all the chlorinated compounds were present, the best degradation occurred with 24-51% removal of each. For these degradation reactions, 39-85% of the stoichiometric chloride expected from complete degradation of the chlorinated ethenes was detected. The time course of PCE/TCE/1,1-DCE degradation was also measured for a mixture of 8, 17, and 6 microM, respectively; initial degradation rates were 0.015, 0.023. and 0.029 nmol/min x mg protein, respectively. This indicates that for the first time an aerobic enzyme can degrade mixtures of all chlorinated ethenes, including the once--so it was believed-completely recalcitrant PCE.  相似文献   

9.
While many anaerobic microbial communities are capable of reductively dechlorinating tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE) to dichloroethene (DCE), vinyl chloride (VC), and finally ethene, the accumulation of the highly toxic intermediates, cis-DCE (cDCE) and VC, presents a challenge for bioremediation processes. Members of the genus Dehalococcoides are apparently solely responsible for dechlorination beyond DCE, but isolates of Dehalococcoides each metabolize only a subset of PCE dechlorination intermediates and the interactions among distinct Dehalococcoides strains that result in complete dechlorination are not well understood. Here we apply quantitative PCR to 16S rRNA and reductase gene sequences to discriminate and track Dehalococcoides strains in a TCE enrichment derived from soil taken from the Alameda Naval Air Station (ANAS) using a four-gene plasmid standard. This standard increased experimental accuracy such that 16S rRNA and summed reductase gene copy numbers matched to within 10%. The ANAS culture was found to contain only a single Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene sequence, matching that of D. ethenogenes 195, but both the vcrA and tceA reductive dehalogenase genes. Quantities of these two genes in the enrichment summed to the quantity of the Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene. Further, between ANAS subcultures enriched on TCE, cDCE, or VC, the relative copy number of the two dehalogenases shifted 14-fold, indicating that the genes are present in two different Dehalococcoides strains. Comparison of cell yields in VC-, cDCE-, and TCE-enriched subcultures suggests that the tceA-containing strain is responsible for nearly all of the TCE and cDCE metabolism in ANAS, whereas the vcrA-containing strain is responsible for all of the VC metabolism.  相似文献   

10.
Mixed cultures capable of dechlorinating chlorinated ethanes and ethenes were enriched from contaminated wetland sediment at Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG) Maryland. The “West Branch Consortium” (WBC-2) was capable of degrading 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane (TeCA), trichloroethene (TCE), cis and trans 1,2-dichloroethene (DCE), 1,1,2-trichloroethane (TCA), 1,2-dichloroethane, and vinyl chloride to nonchlorinated end products ethene and ethane. WBC-2 dechlorinated TeCA, TCA, and cisDCE rapidly and simultaneously. A Clostridium sp. phylogenetically closely related to an uncultured member of a TCE-degrading consortium was numerically dominant in the WBC-2 clone library after 11 months of enrichment in culture. Clostridiales, including Acetobacteria, comprised 65% of the bacterial clones in WBC-2, with Bacteroides (14%), and epsilon Proteobacteria (14%) also numerically important. Methanogens identified in the consortium were members of the class Methanomicrobia, which includes acetoclastic methanogens. Dehalococcoides did not become dominant in the culture, although it was present at about 1% in the microbial population. The WBC-2 consortium provides opportunities for the in situ bioremediation of sites contaminated with mixtures of chlorinated ethenes and ethanes.  相似文献   

11.
Lee J  Lee TK  Löffler FE  Park J 《Biodegradation》2011,22(4):687-698
Tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE) are common groundwater contaminants that also impact tidal flats, especially near urban and industrial areas. However, very little is known about dechlorinating microbial communities in tidal flats. Titanium pyrosequencing, 16S rRNA gene clone libraries, and dechlorinator-targeted quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) characterized reductive dechlorinating activities and populations in tidal flat sediments collected from South Korea’s central west coast near Kangwha. In microcosms established with surface sediments, PCE dechlorination to TCE began within 10 days and 100% of the initial amount of PCE was converted to TCE after 37 days. cis-1,2-Dichloroethene (cis-DCE) was observed as dechlorination end product in microcosms containing sediments collected from deeper zones (i.e., 35–40 cm below ground surface). Pyrosequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA genes and 16S rRNA gene-targeted qPCR results revealed Desulfuromonas michiganensis-like populations predominanted in both TCE and cis-DCE producing microcosms. Other abundant groups included Desulfuromonas thiophila and Pelobacter acidigallici-like populations in the surface sediment microcosms, and Desulfovibrio dechloracetivorans and Fusibacter paucivorans-like populations in the deeper sediment microcosms. Dehalococcoides spp. populations were not detected in these sediments before and after incubation with PCE. The results suggest that tidal flats harbor novel, salt-tolerant dechlorinating populations and that titanium pyrosequencing provides more detailed insight into community structure dynamics of the dechlorinating microcosms than conventional 16S rRNA gene sequencing or fingerprinting methods.  相似文献   

12.
The chemotactic responses of Pseudomonas putida F1, Burkholderia cepacia G4, and Pseudomonas stutzeri OX1 were investigated toward toluene, trichloroethylene (TCE), tetrachloroethylene (PCE), cis-1,2-dichloroethylene (cis-DCE), trans-1,2-dichloroethylene (trans-DCE), 1,1-dichloroethylene (1,1-DCE), and vinyl chloride (VC). P. stutzeri OX1 and P. putida F1 were chemotactic toward toluene, PCE, TCE, all DCEs, and VC. B. cepacia G4 was chemotactic toward toluene, PCE, TCE, cis-DCE, 1,1-DCE, and VC. Chemotaxis of P. stutzeri OX1 grown on o-xylene vapors was much stronger than when grown on o-cresol vapors toward some chlorinated ethenes. Expression of toluene-o-xylene monooxygenase (ToMO) from touABCDEF appears to be required for positive chemotaxis attraction, and the attraction is stronger with the touR (ToMO regulatory) gene.  相似文献   

13.
Understanding the fate of complex electron-donor materials is important for developing efficient biostimulation strategies to treat ground water contamination by chlorinated ethenes (CEs). The fermentation product distributions and H2 production of common permeable reactive barrier (PRB) carbon substrates (dairy whey, sodium lactate syrup, and Hydrogen Release Compound [HRC]) were monitored as measures of substrate efficiency in aquifer microcosms spiked with trichloroethene (TCE). In long-term experiments, the fermentation of PRB substrates to slow-degrading organic acids maintained low H2 partial pressures (≤ 10?3.5) that, as previous studies suggest, may give competitive advantage to dechlorinators over hydrogenotrophic methanogens. Whey-amended and lactate-amended microcosms exhibited faster complete dechlorination and, according to organic acid carbon flow, higher rates of fermentation to acetate. In HRC-amended microcosms, propionate appeared to serve as a carbon sink that prolonged dechlorination. Upon complete dechlorination, whey microcosms contained the highest percentage of organic acid carbon. Native Dehalococcoides populations increased by 3 orders of magnitude (per g sediment) in whey-amended microcosms. Whey's efficiency improved in microcosms prepared with aquifer sediment and water from within a downgradient whey PRB. Results suggested whey loading values of 0.2 kg/m3 may be appropriate under sufficiently reducing conditions to efficiently stimulate hydrogenotrophic and potentially actetotrophic dechlorinating populations. Renewal of whey PRBs may, however, be required. Implications for further long-term study of cost-efficiencies are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
A microbial culture enriched from a trichloroethene-contaminated groundwater aquifer reductively dechlorinated trichloroethene (TCE) and tetrachloroethene (PCE) to ethene. Initial PCE dechlorination rate studies indicated a first-order dependence with respect to substrate at low PCE concentrations, and a zero-order dependence at high concentrations. Studies of TCE and vinyl chloride (VC) dechlorination indicated a first-order dependence at all substrate concentrations. VC had little or no effect on the initial rate of TCE dechlorination. With subsaturating concentrations of chlorinated ethenes, nearly stoichiometric amounts of the toxic intermediate vinyl chloride accumulated prior to its dechlorination to ethene. In contrast, under saturating conditions, in which a dense, nonaqueous-phase liquid existed in equilibrium with the aqueous phase, the chlorinated ethene was dechlorinated to ethene, at a rapid rate, with the accumulation of relatively small amounts of chlorinated intermediates.  相似文献   

15.
Quantitative analysis of genes that code for Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA and chloroethene-reductive dehalogenases TceA, VcrA, and BvcA was done on groundwater sampled from 150 monitoring wells spread over 11 chlorinated ethene polluted European locations. Redundancy analysis was used to relate molecular data to geochemical conditions. Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA- and vinyl chloride (VC)-reductase genes were present at all tested locations in concentrations up to 106 gene copies per ml of groundwater. However, differences between and also within locations were observed. Variation in Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene copy numbers were most strongly correlated to dissolved organic carbon concentration in groundwater and to conditions appropriate for biodegradation of chlorinated ethenes (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency score). In contrast, vcrA gene copy numbers correlated most significantly to VC and chlorinated ethene concentrations. Interestingly, bvcA and especially tceA were more correlated with oxidizing conditions. In groundwater microcosms, dechlorination of 1 mM VC was correlated to an increase of vcrA and/or bvcA gene copies by 2 to 4 orders of magnitude. Interestingly, in 34% of the monitoring wells and in 40% of the active microcosms, the amount of individual VC-reductase gene copies exceeded that of Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene copies. It is concluded that the geographical distribution of the genes was not homogeneous, depending on the geochemical conditions, whereby tceA and bvcA correlated to more oxidized conditions than Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA and vcrA. Because the variation in VC-reductase gene numbers was not directly correlated to variation in Dehalococcoides spp., VC-reductase genes are better monitoring parameters for VC dechlorination capacity than Dehalococcoides spp.Chlorinated ethenes, such as tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE), are persistent groundwater pollutants (15, 22). Because these compounds are toxic and mobile in groundwater systems, they form a serious risk for human health and the environment. PCE and TCE can be dechlorinated by microorganisms under anaerobic conditions by reductive dehalogenation to dichloroethene (DCE), vinyl chloride (VC), and ethene (20). Bioremediation strategies for chloroethene-contaminated sites are often based on (stimulation of) reductive dechlorination of the chlorinated ethenes to ethene (7, 12, 14). In practice, reductive dechlorination of PCE and TCE can be incomplete, resulting in accumulation of DCE or VC. Since VC is much more mobile, toxic, and carcinogenic than PCE and TCE (9), monitoring and stimulation of VC dechlorination are essential steps in bioremediation strategies.Only members of Dehalococcoides spp. are known to be able to reductively dechlorinate VC. Therefore, 16S rRNA genes of these species are often used as molecular target to indicate and monitor DCE and VC dechlorination capacity at contaminated sites. However, previous studies showed different dechlorination capacities for individual Dehalococcoides species, and only a few strains are known to metabolically dechlorinate VC (6, 8, 10, 17, 21). As a consequence, 16S rRNA gene-based detection can lead to overestimation of VC dechlorination capacity. In contrast, although metabolic reductive dechlorination of VC has mostly been linked to Dehalococcoides spp., it cannot be excluded that other microbial species that perform this dechlorination exist. Genes coding for DCE and VC reductases may be exchangeable between different microbial species via horizontal gene transfer. This is plausible since it has been shown that the metabolic genes for VC dechlorination, vcrA and bvcA, have a different evolutionary history than most other Dehalococcoides genes (16). Consequently, Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene-based detection can also lead to underestimation of VC dechlorination capacity.To more precisely determine VC dechlorination capacity, genes directly involved in reductive dechlorination of VC should be used as a molecular target, in addition to Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA genes. A quantitative method was described to detect genes coding for VC-reductases VcrA and BvcA identified in Dehalococcoides sp. strains VS and GT and in Dehalococcoides sp. strain BAV1, respectively (10, 17, 21). Different studies showed direct correlation of vcrA and bvcA gene copy numbers with reductive dechlorination of VC in batch cultures, soil columns, and contaminated sites (2, 11, 19).Quantification of genes that encode VC-reductases can be a useful method to monitor reductive dechlorination of VC in chloroethene-contaminated groundwater during enhanced natural attenuation activities (4, 19). However, little is known about the presence, dispersion, and importance of specific dehalogenase genes in chlorinated ethene polluted groundwater and their correlation to biogeochemical conditions and reductive dechlorination.The objective of the present study was therefore to identify the relative importance of TCE-reductase gene tceA and VC-reductase genes vcrA and bvcA in chloroethene-polluted groundwater and to identify geochemical parameters that contribute to variation in copy numbers of these genes. To this end, groundwater of 150 monitoring wells from 11 European polluted sites was analyzed. Furthermore, microcosms with groundwater from 6 locations were started to test whether VC dechlorination is directly correlated to an increase of vcrA or bvcA genes.  相似文献   

16.
Dehalococcoides ethenogenes is the only known cultivated organism capable of complete dehalogenation of tetrachloroethene (PCE) to ethene. The prevalence of Dehalococcoides species in the environment and their association with complete dehalogenation of chloroethenes suggest that they play an important role in natural attenuation of chloroethenes and are promising candidates for engineered bioremediation of these contaminants. Both natural attenuation and bioremediation require reliable and sensitive methods to monitor the presence, distribution, and fate of the organisms of interest. Here we report the development of 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes for Dehalococcoides species. The two designed probes together encompass 28 sequences of 16S rRNA genes retrieved from the public database. Except D. ethenogenes and CBDB1, all the others are environmental clones obtained from sites contaminated with chlorinated ethenes. They are all closely related and form a unique cluster of Dehalococcoides species. In situ hybridization of probe Dhe1259t with D. ethenogenes strain 195 and two enrichment cultures demonstrated the applicability of the probe to monitoring the abundance of active Dehalococcoides species in these enrichment samples.  相似文献   

17.
A novel Dehalococcoides isolate capable of metabolic trichloroethene (TCE)-to-ethene reductive dechlorination was obtained from contaminated aquifer material. Growth studies and 16S rRNA gene-targeted analyses suggested culture purity; however, the careful quantitative analysis of Dehalococcoides 16S rRNA gene and chloroethene reductive dehalogenase gene (i.e., vcrA, tceA, and bvcA) copy numbers revealed that the culture consisted of multiple, distinct Dehalococcoides organisms. Subsequent transfers, along with quantitative PCR monitoring, yielded isolate GT, possessing only vcrA. These findings suggest that commonly used qualitative 16S rRNA gene-based procedures are insufficient to verify purity of Dehalococcoides cultures. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that strain GT is affiliated with the Pinellas group of the Dehalococcoides cluster and shares 100% 16S rRNA gene sequence identity with two other Dehalococcoides isolates, strain FL2 and strain CBDB1. The new isolate is distinct, as it respires the priority pollutants TCE, cis-1,2-dichloroethene (cis-DCE), 1,1-dichloroethene (1,1-DCE), and vinyl chloride (VC), thereby producing innocuous ethene and inorganic chloride. Strain GT dechlorinated TCE, cis-DCE, 1,1-DCE, and VC to ethene at rates up to 40, 41, 62, and 127 μmol liter−1 day−1, respectively, but failed to dechlorinate PCE. Hydrogen was the required electron donor, which was depleted to a consumption threshold concentration of 0.76 ± 0.13 nM with VC as the electron acceptor. In contrast to the known TCE dechlorinating isolates, strain GT dechlorinated TCE to ethene with very little formation of chlorinated intermediates, suggesting that this type of organism avoids the commonly observed accumulation of cis-DCE and VC during TCE-to-ethene dechlorination.  相似文献   

18.
Mitigation strategies can be implemented to decrease chlorinated and non‐chlorinated organic exposures to biota of aquatic receiving systems thereby reducing associated risks. In this work, we investigated the concept of coupling a physical/chemical reactor (i.e. a cavitation reactor) with a biological reactor (i.e. a constructed wetland) in an effort to efficiently transform PCE, TCE, and petroleum in freshwater into non‐toxic chemical forms or concentrations. Rates of TCE degradation due to cavitation ranged from 0.010 to 0.026 min‐1 with corresponding half‐lives of 69 to 27 min. Compared to controls, degradation of petroleum in water by cavitation was not detected in these experiments. After treatment in anaerobic wetland reactors, TCE and PCE decreased by more than 99 % under two flow regimes (5‐d and 20‐d HRT). In reciprocating constructed wetland reactors receiving petroleum, mean COD, BOD5, and total Zn decreased by 90.0, 88.8, and 86.8 %, respectively, in wetland outflows compared to the initial conditions (96‐h HRT). Percent survival (96‐h) of D. magna and P. promelas increased from zero percent in initial conditions to 80.1 (± 18.9) and 80.0 (± 21.4) %, respectively, after treatment in the constructed wetland reactors. The experimental results obtained in the laboratory‐scale set‐up and the theoretical model for the hybrid reactor concept will be used to obtain the intrinsic kinetic coefficients for the appropriate reactors. This kinetic information will be used to scale‐up the hybrid reactor model concept for the same level of pollutant removal.  相似文献   

19.
The presence of chloroethene dechlorination activity as well as several bacterial genera containing mainly organohalide-respiring members was investigated in 34 environmental samples from 18 different sites. Cultures inoculated with these environmental samples on tetrachloroethene and amended weekly with a seven organic electron donor mixture resulted in 11 enrichments with cis-DCE, ten with VC, and 11 with ethene as dechlorination end product, and only two where no dechlorination was observed. “Dehalococcoides” spp. and Desulfitobacterium spp. were detected in the majority of the environmental samples independently of the dechlorination end product formed. The concomitant presence of Dehalococcoides spp. and Desulfitobacterium spp. in the majority of the enrichments suggested that chloroethene dechlorination was probably the result of catalysis by at least two organohalide-respiring genera either in parallel or by stepwise catalysis. A more detailed study of one enrichment on cis-DCE suggested that in this culture Desulfitobacterium spp. as well as Dehalococcoides spp. dechlorinated cis-DCE whereas dechlorination of VC was only catalyzed by the latter.  相似文献   

20.
This study investigated the biotransformation pathways of 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane (1,1,2,2-TeCA) in the presence of chloroethenes (i.e. tetrachloroethene, PCE; trichloroethene, TCE) in anaerobic microcosms constructed with subsurface soil and groundwater from a contaminated site. When amended with yeast extract, lactate, butyrate, or H2 and acetate, 1,1,2,2-TeCA was initially dechlorinated via both hydrogenolysis to 1,1,2-trichloroethane (1,1,2-TCA) (major pathway) and dichloroelimination to dichloroethenes (DCEs) (minor pathway), with both reactions occurring under sulfidogenic conditions. In the presence of only H2, the hydrogenolysis of 1,1,2,2-TeCA to 1,1,2-TCA apparently required the presence of acetate to occur. Once formed, 1,1,2-TCA was degraded predominantly via dichloroelimination to vinyl chloride (VC). Ultimately, chloroethanes were converted to chloroethenes (mainly VC and DCEs) which persisted in the microcosms for very long periods along with PCE and TCE originally present in the groundwater. Hydrogenolysis of chloroethenes occurred only after highly reducing methanogenic conditions were established. However, substantial conversion to ethene (ETH) was observed only in microcosms amended with yeast extract (200 mg/l), suggesting that groundwater lacked some nutritional factors which were likely provided to dechlorinating microorganisms by this complex organic substrate. Bioaugmentation with an H2-utilizing PCE-dechlorinating Dehalococcoides spp. -containing culture resulted in the conversion of 1,1,2,2-TeCA, PCE and TCE to ETH and VC. No chloroethanes accumulated during degradation suggesting that 1,1,2,2-TeCA was degraded through initial dichloroelimination into DCEs and then typical hydrogenolysis into ETH and VC.  相似文献   

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