| Literature DB >> 27130267 |
Nadja Schultz-Jensen1, Jens Aamand1, Sebastian R Sørensen2.
Abstract
Pesticides are used extensively worldwide, which has led to the unwanted contamination of soil and water resources. Former use of the herbicide 2,6-dichlorobenzonitrile (dichlobenil) has caused pollution of ground and surface water resources by the stable degradation product 2,6-dichlorobenzamide (BAM) in several parts of Europe, which has resulted in the costly closure of several drinking water wells. One strategy for preventing this in future is bioaugmentation using bacterial degraders. BAM-degrading Aminobacter sp. MSH1 was therefore formulated into dried beads and tests undertaken to establish their potential for use in the remediation of polluted soil, sand and water. The formulation procedure included freeze drying, combined with trehalose addition for cell wall protection, thus ensuring a high amount of viable cells following prolonged storage at room temperature. The beads were round-shaped pellets with a diameter of about 1.25 mm, a dry matter content of approximately 95 % and an average viable cell content of 4.4 × 10(9) cells/g bead. Formulated MSH1 cells led to a similar, and frequently even faster, BAM mineralisation (20-65 % (14)CO2 produced from (14)C-labelled BAM) in batch tests conducted with sand, water and different soil moisture contents compared to adding free cells. Furthermore, the beads were easy to handle and had a shelf life of several months.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteria formulation; Bioaugmentation; Bioremediation; Dichlobenil
Year: 2016 PMID: 27130267 PMCID: PMC4851666 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-016-0204-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
Fig. 1Viability of MSH1 (a) and PM2 (b) in powder and beads over time. Stability was measured in colony-forming unit per gram powder or beads at regular intervals over a period of about 5 months. Each data point is a mean of triplicates, with standard deviations shown with errors bars
Fig. 2Mineralisation of 14C-ring-labelled BAM to 14CO2. BAM mineralisation with free and formulated MSH1 in buffer (a, b) and sand (c, d) expressed as 14C-BAM mineralised to 14CO2. Each data point is a mean of triplicates, with standard deviations shown with errors bars
Fig. 3Mineralisation of 14C-ring-labelled BAM to 14CO2. BAM mineralisation with free and formulated MSH1 in soil with high (a, d), medium (b, e) and low (c, f) water contents. Each data point is a mean of triplicates, with standard deviations shown with errors bars