| Literature DB >> 29751654 |
Ting Yang1, Lei Ren2, Yang Jia3, Shuanghu Fan4, Junhuan Wang5, Jiayi Wang6, Ruth Nahurira7, Haisheng Wang8, Yanchun Yan9.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Rhodococcus ruber; biodegradation; bioremediation; di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate; marine plastic debris
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29751654 PMCID: PMC5982003 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15050964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Typical di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP)-degrading bacteria strains and their characteristics.
| Sources | Strain | Experimental Conditions | Substrate (Substrate Profile) | Degradation Efficiency | Major Intermediates | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marine plastic debris in coastal seawater | pH 7.0, 30 °C | DEHP (DDP, DNP, DOP, DCHP, BBP, DHPP, DHP, DAP, DBP, DPrP, DEP, DMP, PA, BA, SA, PNP, diphenyl, 1,2,3-tetrachlorobenzene, PCA, catechol) | 100 mg/L, 100% DEHP, 3 days | MEHP, PA, BA | ||
| Activated sludge | pH 6.5–8.0, 30 °C Inhibition below 10 °C and above 35 °C) | PAEs (DMP, DEP, DnBP, DIBP, DnOP, DEHP) | 100 mg/L, 99% DMP, DEP, DnBP, DIBP; 20% DnOP, 30% DEHP, 3 days | NR | [ | |
| River sediment and petrochemical sludge | pH 7.0, 30 °C | DEP, DPrP, DBP, DPP, DCP, DHP, BBP, DEHP | 5 mg/L, 32.6% DEHP and 91.6% DEHP, respectively, 7 days | NR | [ | |
| River sediment | Anaerobic bacteria community | pH 7.0, 30 °C | DEP, DBP, DEHP | 5 μg/g, 91% DEP, 94.1% DBP, 95.4% DEHP, 84 days | NR | [ |
| Constructed wetland soil | pH 7.0, 30 °C | DBP (DMP, DEP, DOP, DEHP, PA) | 100 mg/L, 51.4%, DEHP, 70 h | NR | [ | |
| Heavily plastics-contaminated sewage sludge | pH 8.0, 32 °C | DEHP | 10 mM, 63% DEHP, 72 h; 100% DEHP 96 h | MEHP, 2-ethyl hexanol | [ | |
| Aerobic granules | pH 7.0, 25–35 °C | DMP (DBP, DEP, DEHP) | 29–33% 290 mg/L DMP, 5 days | PA, BA | [ | |
| Wetland soil | 34.2 °C | DBP (PA, PCA, MBP, DMP, DEP, DBP, DEHP, DnOP, DINP) | 1000 mg/L, 82.5% DBP, 5 days | MBP, PA, PCA | [ | |
| Compost-amended soil | NR | DMP (DEP, DBP, DnOP, DEHP, MBP, PA, BA, PCA, Catechol) | 200 mg/L, 100% DBP, 3 days | MBP, PA | [ | |
| Activated sludge | Bacterial community | pH 7.0, 30 °C | DEP (DBP, BBP, DEHP) | 50 mg/kg, 95.2% DEHP, 98.6% BBP, 99.2% DBP, 98% DEP | NR | [ |
| Vegetable greenhouse soil | pH 7.0, 40 °C | DMP (DEP, DBP, DEHP) | 100 mg/L, 100% DBP, 60 h, 98.87% DMP, 94.94% DEP, 72.15% DBP, 45 h | DMP, PA | [ | |
| Organic amendment soil | Bacterial community | NR | DBP, DEHP | NR | NR | [ |
| Municipal waste | pH 7.0, 28 °C | DMP, DEP, DnBP, DnOP, DEHP, BBP, DPP, MnOP, PCA, no PA | 750 mg/L, 100% DnOP 48 h | CO2, H2O | [ | |
| Petroleum-contaminated soil | pH 8.0, 30 °C, 0–5% NaCl | DEHP, DBP, DCHP, DMP, DEP, PA | 800 mg/L, 94.6% DEHP, 7 days | MEHP, PA, BA | [ | |
| Activated sludge | pH 6.5–7.5, 25–35 °C | DEHP | 1000 mg/L, 100% DEHP, 10 days | MEHP, PA, BA, PCA, muconic acid, pyruvic acid | [ | |
| Activated sludge | pH 6–9, 30 °C, | DEHP | 400 mg/L, 90% DEHP, add 100–1000 μg/L Fe3+ can improve degradation rate, 100 μg/L Mn2+ can improve but 500–1000 μg/L Mn2+ inhibition | MEHP, PA, PCA | [ | |
| Vegetable soil | pH 7.0, 28 °C | DEHP | 200 mg/L, 96.4% DEHP, 7 days | NR | [ | |
| Soil | pH 7.5, 30 °C | DEHP (DBP, DEP, DPP, DPrP, PA) | 5 mM, 99% DEHP, 5 days | MEHP, PA, PCA | [ | |
| Soil | pH 7.0, 30 °C | DEHP | 100 mg/L, G1, G2, 97%DEHP, 3 days; G7, 32.5% DEHP, G11 cooperation with surfactant 90% DEHP within 24 h | NR | [ | |
| Garden soil | pH 6.8, 30 °C | DEHP | 98% 0.1% ( | 2-ethylhexanol, 1,2-benzenedicarboxylic acid | [ | |
| Contaminated river sediment | pH 7.0 30 °C | BBP (DMP, DEP, DBP, DOP, DEHP, PA, catechol, pyridine, BA, Tween-80) | 500 mg/L, 100% BBP, 96 h | MBP, PA, BA | [ | |
| NR | pH 7.2, 29.6 °C | DEHP (DMP, DEP, DBP, DOP) | 200 mg/L, 90% DEHP, 4 days | MEHP, PA | [ | |
| Soil | pH 8.0, 30 °C | DEHP (DCHP, DBP, DEP, DMP) | 50 mg/L, 100% DEHP, 5 days | MEHP, PA | [ | |
| Mixed pulper waste | pH 6.5, 28 °C | DEHP | 1000 mg/L, 95% DEHP, 60 h | MEHP, PA, PCA, butanediol | [ | |
| Purchased | 25 °C | DEHP | 1000 mg/L, 100% DEHP, 21 days | MEHP, 2-ethyl-hexan-1-ol, PA | [ |
NR: not reported; dimethyl phthalate (DMP), diethyl phthalate (DEP), di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP), benzyl butyl phthalate (BBP), di-cyclohexyl phthalate (DCHP), di-propyl phthalate (DPrP), dipentyl phthalate (DAP), dihexyl phthalate (DHP), di-n-heptyl phthalate (DHPP), dioctyl phthalate (DOP), di-nonyl phthalate (DNP), and di-decyl phthalate (DDP); di-n-butyl phthalate(DnBP); diiso-butyl ortho-phthalate (DIBP); dioctyl phthalate (DnOP); diisononyl ortho-phthalate (DINP); mono (2-ethylehxyl) phthalate (MEHP); mono-n-octyl phthalate (MnOP); phthalic acid (PA); phthalic acid ester (PAEs); protocatechuic acid (PCA); benzoic acid (BA); mono-n-butyl phthalate (MBP).
Experimental sets for DEHP biodegradation with environmental samples.
| Sets | Inoculum Volume (mL of Seeds) | DEHP Concentration | Photoperiod | Light | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | A | 3 | 100 | 16:8 | 5 × 103 |
| B | 0 | 100 | 16:8 | ||
| 2 | C | 3 | 100 | - | |
| D | 0 | 100 | - | ||
Figure 1(a) The colonial morphology of strain YC-YT1 on a Luria-Bertani plate; (b) Morphological characteristics of strain YC-YT1 by scanning electron microscope (Hitachi-SU8010).
Figure 2Phylogenetic analysis of strain YC-YT1 based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. The scale bar equals 0.02 changes per nucleotide position.
Figure 3Effects of initial pH on DEHP degradation and cell growth of strain YC-YT1. (a) Effects of initial pH on DEHP degradation; (b) Effects of initial pH on the cell growth of strain YC-YT1. Error bars indicate standard deviations of the means.
Figure 4Effects of incubation temperature on the degradation of DEHP and cell growth of strain YC-YT1. (a) Effects of incubation temperature on the degradation of DEHP; (b) Effects of incubation temperature on the cell growth of strain YC-YT1; and (c) DEHP degradation rate and cell growth of strain YC-YT1 under optimized conditions. Error bars indicate standard deviations of the means.
Figure 5(a) Effects of sodium chloride (NaCl) concentration on DEHP degradation. DEHP degradation efficiency by strain YC-YT1 under different NaCl concentrations. (b) Effects of glucose concentration on DEHP degradation. DEHP degradation efficiency by strain YC-YT1 under different glucose concentrations. Error bars indicate standard deviations of the means.
Figure 6The degradation efficiency of individual phthalic acid esters (PAEs), including DEHP, dimethyl phthalate (DMP), diethyl phthalate (DEP), di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP), benzyl butyl phthalate (BBP), di-cyclohexyl phthalate (DCHP), di-propyl phthalate (DPrP), dipentyl phthalate (DAP), dihexyl phthalate (DHP), di-n-heptyl phthalate (DHPP), dioctyl phthalate (DOP), di-nonyl phthalate (DNP), and di-decyl phthalate (DDP); and some kinds of aromatic compound, including diphenyl, p-nitrophenol (PNP), 1,2,3,4-tetrachlorobenzene, phthalic acid (PA), salicylic acid (SA), benzoic acid (BA), phenol, and catechol. The structures of the target substrates are presented in Supplementary Figure S1. Error bars indicate standard deviations of the means.
Figure 7(a) Maximum and (b) minimum degrading ability of DEHP. The standard error of the mean of the three replicates is represented by the error bar.
Figure 8The proposed degradation pathway of DEHP. DEHP was hydrolyzed to phthalic acid (PA) via the intermediate MEHP. BA was metabolized for cell growth through the benzoate metabolism pathway.
Figure 9(a) The degradation of DEHP by strain YC-YT1 with agricultural soil, garden soil, and river water samples. (b) The degradation of DEHP by strain YC-YT1 with sediment and seawater samples. The error bars indicate standard deviations of the means (n = 3). The detailed information of sets A, B, C, and D are presented in Table 2.
Figure 10The cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH) of strain YC-YT1 during growth on glucose and different DEHP concentrations. The concentration of glucose was 5 g/L. The error bars indicate the standard deviation of the means (n = 3).