| Literature DB >> 25177681 |
Abd El-Latif Hesham1, Asmaa M M Mawad2, Yasser M Mostafa3, Ahmed Shoreit2.
Abstract
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (<span class="Chemical">PAHs) are serious pollutants and health hazards. In this study, 15 PAHs-degrading bacteria were isolated from Egyptian oily soil. Among them, one Gram-negative strain (ASU-06) was selected and biodegradation ability and initial catabolic genes of petroleum compounds were investigated. Comparison of 16S rRNA gene sequence of strain ASU-06 to published sequences in GenBank database as well as phylogenetic analysis identified ASU-06 as Sphingomonas koreensis. Strain ASU-06 degraded 100, 99, 98, and 92.7% of 100 mg/L naphthalene, phenanthrene, anthracene, and pyrene within 15 days, respectively. When these PAHs present in a mixed form, the enhancement phenomenon appeared, particularly in the degradation of pyrene, whereas the degradation rate was 98.6% within the period. This is the first report showing the degradation of different PAHs by this species. PCR experiments with specific primers for catabolic genes alkB, alkB1, nahAc, C12O, and C23O suggested that ASU-06 might possess genes for aliphatic and PAHs degradation, while PAH-RHDαGP gene was not detected. Production of biosurfactants and increasing cell-surface hydrophobicity were investigated. GC/MS analysis of intermediate metabolites of studied PAHs concluded that this strain utilized these compounds via two main pathways, and phthalate was the major constant product that appeared in each day of the degradation period.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25177681 PMCID: PMC4142378 DOI: 10.1155/2014/127674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
List of primers used for detection of mono- and dioxygenase genes.
| Primer | Sequence (5′ to 3′) | Expected size (bp) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| alkBF | 5′-AACTACMTCGARCAYTACGG-3′ | 100 | Powell et al. [ |
| AlkB1F | 5′-TACGGGCACTTCGCGATTGA-3′ | 550 | Kloos et al. [ |
| nahAc F | 5′-TGGCGATGAAGAACTTTTCC-3′ | 487 |
Laurie and Jones [ |
| PAH-RHD-GPf | 5′-CGG CGC CGA CAA YTT YGT NGG-3′ | 292 | Cébron et al. [ |
| C12OF | 5′-GCCAACGTCGACGTCTGGCAGCA-3′ | 350 | Sei et al. [ |
| C23OF | 5′-AAGAGGCATGGGGGCGCACCGGTTCGA-3′ | 900 | Sei et al. [ |
Figure 1Phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA gene of isolate ASU-06 and other related Sphingomonas spp. By neighbor-joining method. Numbers at the nodes indicate bootstrap support (%) based on 100 replicates. The scale bar indicates 0.005 nucleotide substitutions per nucleotide position. GenBank accession numbers are given in parentheses.
Figure 2The relation between growth curve, % of PAHs degradation, and activity of biosurfactants (U/mg protien) of S. koreensis, growing on MBS supplemented with 100 mg/L of (a) naphthalene, (b) anthracene, (c) phenanthrene, and (d) pyrene “as single substrate.”
Figure 3The relation between growth curve at OD 600, % of PAHs degradation, and activity of biosurfactants (U/mg protien) of S. koreensis, growing on MBS supplemented with 100 mg/L of four PAHs “as mixed substrate.”
Figure 4PCR products based on primers specific for the catabolic genes from the left to the right, AlkB, AlkB1, nahAc, C23O, and C12O, that are detected in S. koreensis, with 100 bp DNA ladder (M).
Some PAHs catabolic genes detected in ASU-06 using specific primers for each gene.
| Gene | Strain | |
|---|---|---|
|
| Expected band (bp) | |
|
| + | 100 |
|
| + | 550 |
|
| + | 487 |
|
| − | 292 |
|
| + | 350 |
|
| + | 900 |
The compounds identified through GC-MS analysis and their mass fragmentation pattern formed by Sphingomonas koreensis after 15 days of incubation in MBS containing (100 mg/L) naphthalene, phenanthrene, and pyrene, separately.
| Number | Metabolites | RT (min) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (cont.) | Naphthalene | 25.56 | 128 (M+, 100), 102 (10) |
| 2 (6 d) | 1-Methoxynaphthalene | 17.37 | 197 (M+, 3), 153 (65), 128 (100), 102 (6) |
| 3 (15 d) | 1-Hydroxy-2-naphthoate | 23.63 | 237 (M+, 18), 188 (100), 141 (39), 128 (12), 107 (28), 86 (20), 53 (71) |
| 4 (15 d) | 2-Hydroxy 4-methoxy cinnamate | 55.17 | 239 (M+, 10), 178 (100), 161 (60), 133 (30), 55 (17) |
| 5 (6 d) | Salicylate | 28.45 | 179 (M+, 8), 137 (100), 122 (12), 97 (20), 57 (40) |
| 6 (6, 15 d) | Phthalate | 51.84 | 279 (M+, 10), 180 (2), 167 (42), 149 (100), 71 (12), 57 (20), |
| 7 (15 d) | Phthalate 3,4-dihydrodiol | 47.24 | 267 (M+, 2), 202 (100), 174 (3), 149 (36), 137 (1), 101 (12), 98 (5) |
| 8 (15) | Pyruvate | 8.12 | 101 (M+, 5), 89 (70), 73 (5), 71 (100), 56 (53) |
| 1 (cont.) | Phenanthrene | 44.59 | 178 (M+, 100), 152 (6), 76 (5) |
| 2 | 1-Hydroxyphenanthrene | 53.71 | 197 (M+, 5), 193 (100), 178 (12), 127 (12), 95 (25), 69 (16), 60 (23) |
| 3 | Phthalate | 58.97 | 279 (M+, 12), 219 (3), 167 (42), 149 (100), 57 (14) |
| 4 | Dihydroxy-cis, cis muconate semialdehyde | 48.21 | 219 (M+, 2), 175 (10), 167 (100), 142 (5), 101 (10), 57 (12) |
| 5 | 2-Hydroxy-4-methoxy cinnamate | 55.43 | 239 (M+, 10), 178 (100), 161 (58), 133 (30), 55 (15) |
| 1 (cont.) | Pyrene | 38.59 | 202 (M+, 100), 174 (3), 150 (5), 135 (1), 122 (3), 101 (35), 88 (10), 74 (4), 62 (2), 50 (2), 28 (3) |
| 2 (12 d) | 1-Hydroxypyrene | 39.743 | 218 (M+, 100), 189 (25), 174 (2), 163 (5), 150 (2), 139 (2), 109 (15), 95 (13), 81 (4), 63 (3) |
| 3 (15 d) | 4,5-Dihydroxypyrene | 43.239 | 236 (M+, 100), 200 (35), 174 (5), 150 (3), 118 (18), 100 (36), 74 (5), 51 (2), 28 (2) |
| 4 (12) | Phenanthrene-4,5-dicarboxylate | 47.125 | 254 (M+, 19), 236 (15), 221 (100), 202 (10), 167 (25), 149 (40), 128 (21), 113 (38), 96 (35), 40 (100) |
| 5 (12 d) | 3,4-Dihydroxyphenanthrene | 38.287 | 208 (M+, 100), 193 (80), 176 (15), 164 (30), 150 (20), 132 (32), 118 (28), 105 (39), 79 (60), 51 (30) |
| 6 (9 d) | 1-Hydroxy-2-naphthoate | 19.71 | 188 (M+, 100), 146 (5), 119 (30), 105 (55), 91 (73), 78 (10), 65 (15), 51 (3), 41 (5) |
| 7 (15 d) | Benzocoumarin | 68.58 | 224 (M+, 15), 207 (50), 191 (10), 163 (15), 147 (13), 120 (80), 92 (48), 63 (25), 44 (100), 16 (83) |
| 8 (12 d) | trans-2-Carboxy-benzalpyruvate | 37.426 | 203 (M+, 100), 189 (9), 175 (5), 149 (5), 137 (1), 123 (1), 101 (15), 88 (10), 75 (3), 40 (12) |
| 9 (all d) | Phthalate | 46.45 | 297 (M+, 10), 167 (30), 149 (100), 132 (1), 113 (15), 93 (2), 71 (25), 57 (35), 43 (22) |
| 10 (12 d) | Phthalate 3,4-dihydrodiol | 37.676 | 202 (M+, 100), 182 (19), 151 (65), 133 (32), 114 (1), 101 (20), 88 (8), 63 (12) |
| 11 (6 d) | 3,4-Dihydroxyphthalate | 39.7 | 211 (M+, 5), 195 (60), 167 (25), 146 (10), 132 (26), 117 (31), 105 (5), 90 (17), 76 (60), 63 (20), 40 (100) |
| 12 (6 d) | Carboxy-cis, cis-muconate | 40.023 | 183 (M+, 15), 168 (25), 155 (20), 141 (10), 124 (21), 111 (21), 97 (20), 85 (25), 71 (20), 57 (55), 40 (100) |
| 13 (15 d) | 1-Methoxy, 2-hydroxypyrene | 48.32 | 247 (M+, 100), 217 (50), 201 (100), 189 (50), 174 (10), 150 (5), 100 (20), 87 (5) |
| 14 (6 d) | 1-Methoxyphenanthrene | 38.2 | 208 (M+, 100), 193 (80), 177 (5), 164 (30), 150 (20), 132 (32), 118 (28), 105 (39), 79 (60), 51 (30) |
Retention times (RT) and, mass per charge ion (m/z), (%) abundancy. Incubation time per days (d).