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Salt-tolerant phenol-degrading microorganisms isolated from Amazonian soil samples
Authors:Artur Eduardo Ribeiro Bastos  David Henry Moon  Antonio Rossi  Jack Thomas Trevors  Siu Mui Tsai
Affiliation:Departamento de Química, Faculdade de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeir?o Preto, USP, CEP 14.040–901, Ribeir?o Preto, SP, Brazil,
Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura, Universidade de S?o Paulo, Avenida Centenário 303, Caixa Postal 96, CEP 13.400–970, Piracicaba, SP, Brasil,
Department of Environmental Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, N1G2W1,
Abstract:Two phenol-degrading microorganisms were isolated from Amazonian rain forest soil samples after enrichment in the presence of phenol and a high salt concentration. The yeast Candida tropicalis and the bacterium Alcaligenes faecoalis were identified using several techniques, including staining, morphological observation and biochemical tests, fatty acid profiles and 16S/18S rRNA sequencing. Both isolates, A. faecalis and C. tropicalis, were used in phenol degradation assays, with Rhodococcus erythropolis as a reference phenol-degrading bacterium, and compared to microbial populations from wastewater samples collected from phenol-contaminated environments. C. tropicalis tolerated higher concentrations of phenol and salt (16 mM and 15%, respectively) than A. faecalis (12 mM and 5.6%). The yeast also tolerated a wider pH range (3-9) during phenol degradation than A. faecalis (pH 7-9). Phenol degradation was repressed in C. tropicalis by acetate and glucose, but not by lactate. Glucose and acetate had little effect, while lactate stimulated phenol degradation in A. faecalis. To our knowledge, these soils had never been contaminated with man-made phenolic compounds and this is the first report of phenol-degrading microorganisms from Amazonian forest soil samples. The results support the idea that natural uncontaminated environments contain sufficient genetic diversity to make them valid choices for the isolation of microorganisms useful in bioremediation.
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