Author:
Frassinetti Stefania,Setti Leonardo,Corti Andrea,Farrinelli Paolo,Montevecchi Piercarlo,Vallini Giovanni
Abstract
Rhizobium meliloti Orange 1 was isolated from aerobic sediments of a drainage ditch receiving oil refinery leakage. This bacterium has been shown to be capable of growing on dibenzothiophene as the sole carbon and energy source. This strain can also efficaciously nodulate alfalfa plants. In cultures with dibenzothiophene, Orange 1 produces six degradation intermediates. By means of analyses with UV-visible and GC-MS spectrometry, as well as nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, three of these products were identified as 3-hydroxy-2-formyl-benzothiophene (product A), benzothienopyran-2-one (product B'), and dibenzothiophene-5-oxide (product D). This suggests that R. meliloti Orange 1 metabolizes dibenzothiophene via oxidative cleavage of the aromatic ring with a mechanism analogous to that described for naphthalene degradation.Key words: biodegradation, dibenzothiophene, Rhizobium.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
42 articles.
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