| Literature DB >> 21863143 |
Gérald Thouand1, Marie-José Durand, Armand Maul, Christian Gancet, Han Blok.
Abstract
The European REACH Regulation (Registration, Evaluation, Authorization of CHemical substances) implies, among other things, the evaluation of the biodegradability of chemical substances produced by industry. A large set of test methods is available including detailed information on the appropriate conditions for testing. However, the inoculum used for these tests constitutes a "black box." If biodegradation is achievable from the growth of a small group of specific microbial species with the substance as the only carbon source, the result of the test depends largely on the cell density of this group at "time zero." If these species are relatively rare in an inoculum that is normally used, the likelihood of inoculating a test with sufficient specific cells becomes a matter of probability. Normally this probability increases with total cell density and with the diversity of species in the inoculum. Furthermore the history of the inoculum, e.g., a possible pre-exposure to the test substance or similar substances will have a significant influence on the probability. A high probability can be expected for substances that are widely used and regularly released into the environment, whereas a low probability can be expected for new xenobiotic substances that have not yet been released into the environment. Be that as it may, once the inoculum sample contains sufficient specific degraders, the performance of the biodegradation will follow a typical S shaped growth curve which depends on the specific growth rate under laboratory conditions, the so called F/M ratio (ratio between food and biomass) and the more or less toxic recalcitrant, but possible, metabolites. Normally regulators require the evaluation of the growth curve using a simple approach such as half-time. Unfortunately probability and biodegradation half-time are very often confused. As the half-time values reflect laboratory conditions which are quite different from environmental conditions (after a substance is released), these values should not be used to quantify and predict environmental behavior. The probability value could be of much greater benefit for predictions under realistic conditions. The main issue in the evaluation of probability is that the result is not based on a single inoculum from an environmental sample, but on a variety of samples. These samples can be representative of regional or local areas, climate regions, water types, and history, e.g., pristine or polluted. The above concept has provided us with a new approach, namely "Probabio." With this approach, persistence is not only regarded as a simple intrinsic property of a substance, but also as the capability of various environmental samples to degrade a substance under realistic exposure conditions and F/M ratio.Entities:
Keywords: biodegradation; evaluation; inoculum; persistence; probability
Year: 2011 PMID: 21863143 PMCID: PMC3149152 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2011.00164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1Relationship between cell density (direct count of bacterial cell number with epifluorescence) and results of para-nitrophenol biodegradability test (shown by the points) and probability model (solid line) for tests conducting with river waters inocula . Each point is the probability of para-nitrophenol tests (or the percentage of tests) obtained for a specific cell density. The red arrows represent the cell density (1011 bacteria/L) leading to 99.9% of positive tests. (i.e., biodegradation of para-nitrophenol). At this cell level, the origin of the inoculum did not influence the issue of the test.
Figure 2The four inoculum parameters (controllable or not) that govern the issue of a biodegradability test. The S0/XD0 is the concentration of test substance versus the concentration of specific degraders at “time zero” in a test which plays a major role in the kinetics of biodegradation. According to Chudoba et al. (1992) if the ratio is over 4 mg DOC/mg SS, the carbon source offers enough energy for the cell division. Conversely, if the ratio is under this average value, no cell division will occur due to lack of energy provided by the carbon source in the test. SMP, soluble microbial polymer; DOC, dissolved organic carbon; SS, suspended solid.
Figure 3Overall scheme of the strategy used in the “Probabio” concept. I, inoculum (see explanation in the text).
Experimental design for biodegradability testing (Dil, dilution).
| S0 | Temperature (°C) | Cell density | Inoculum |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low S0 conc. (μg/L) | 10 | X0opt 6xdilX0 | 3 Activated sludges |
| 25 | X0opt 6xdilX0 | 2 Soils | |
| High S0 conc. (mg/L) | 10 | X0opt 6xdilX0 | 2 River waters |
| 25 | X0opt 6xdilX0 | 3 Marine waters |
X0, initial total cell density; X0opt, optimal cell density; 6xdilX0, series of 6 dilutions of the inoculum.