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Microbial degradation of recalcitrant compounds and synthetic aromatic polymers
Authors:Marcel D Faber  
Institution:

Princeton Research Center, American Can Company, P.O. Box 50, Princeton, N.J. 08540, USA

Abstract:The evolution of microbial catabolic enzymes cannot keep pace with the rapid introduction of novel compounds into the environment. These new synthetic compounds that are slowly biodegradable or non-biodegradable are known as recalcitrant compounds, and range from simple halogenated hydrocarbons to complex polymers. Recalcitrant compounds can be made biodegradable by developing microorganisms capable of degrading the compound and by treating the compound to make it more conducive to mirobial attack. Many factors contribute to recalcitrance. The organism may lack the necessary genetic information. The organism can acquire this information by plasmid transfer or de novo enzyme synthesis. Plasmids have been characterized that degrade or transform antibiotics, pesticides, and hydrocarbons. By the use of chemostat techniques or chemical mutagens, organisms have been shown to synthesize de novo enzymes. The compound may be too large to enter the cell, or a transport system may not exist to transport it across the membrane. The compound may be insoluble, either as a solid or a liquid, and the microorganism may lack the proper nutrients. Recalcitrant compounds can be oxygenated prior to degradation, in the presence of a readily assimilable carbon source. In the absence of the assimilable carbon source, the recalcitrant compound is not degraded, or only very slowly. Examples of such co-oxidative metabolism are alkane and lignin degradation. Polymers, particularly synthetic ones, are prime examples of difficult-to-degrade compounds. The initial rate of polymer degradation follows a Freundlich or modified Langmuir isotherm rather than Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Microorganisms can irreversibly bind to solid surfaces by various methods. Soil microorganisms have been found to degrade styrene monomers and dimers. Polystyrene has been shown to be biodegradable by 14CO2 evolution but at a very slow rate. In car tyres, styrene as a copolymer of butadiene is co-metabolized in the presence of other assimilable carbon sources.
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