Degradation of trichloroethylene by Pseudomonas cepacia G4 and the constitutive mutant strain G4 5223 PR1 in aquifer microcosms

Author:

Krumme M L1,Timmis K N1,Dwyer D F1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, National Research Center for Biotechnology, Braunschweig, Germany.

Abstract

Pseudomonas cepacia G4 degrades trichloroethylene (TCE) via a degradation pathway for aromatic compounds which is induced by substrates such as phenol and tryptophan. P. cepacia G4 5223 PR1 (PR1) is a Tn5 insertion mutant which constitutively expresses the toluene ortho-monooxygenase responsible for TCE degradation. In groundwater microcosms, phenol-induced strain G4 and noninduced strain PR1 degraded TCE (20 and 50 microM) to nondetectable levels (< 0.1 microM) within 24 h at densities of 10(8) cells per ml; at lower densities, degradation of TCE was not observed after 48 h. In aquifer sediment microcosms, TCE was reduced from 60 to < 0.1 microM within 24 h at 5 x 10(8) PR1 organisms per g (wet weight) of sediment and from 60 to 26 microM over a period of 10 weeks at 5 x 10(7) PR1 organisms per g. Viable G4 and PR1 cells decreased from approximately 10(7) to 10(4) per g over the 10-week period.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference21 articles.

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4. LeBlanc D. R. 1984. Sewage plume in a sand and gravel aquifer Cape Cod Massachusetts. U.S. Geological Survey Water Supply Paper 2218. U.S. Government Printing Office Washington D.C.

5. Trichloroethylene biodegradation by a methane-oxidizing bacterium;Little C. D.;Appl. Environ. Microbiol.,1988

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