| Literature DB >> 29971048 |
Siyan Zhao1, Matthew J Rogers1, Chang Ding2, Jianzhong He1.
Abstract
Extensive utilization of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) as flame retardants since the 1960s in a variety of commercial products has resulted in ubiquitous environmental distribution of commercial PBDE mixtures. Dangers posed to biological populations became apparent after the discovery of elevated levels of PBDEs in biota, most notably in human breast milk and tissues. Environmental persistence of PBDEs results in significant transboundary displacement, threatening fragile ecosystems globally. Despite efforts to curtail usage of PBDEs, public concern remains about the effects of legacy PBDEs contamination and continued discharge of PBDEs in regions lacking restrictions on usage and manufacture. Among available technologies for remediation of PBDEs such as ex-situ soil washing, electrokinetic degradation, and biodegradation, this review focuses on bioremediation by microbes under anaerobic conditions. Bioremediation is generally preferred as it is less disruptive to contaminated ecosystems, is cost-effective, and can be implemented at sites that may be inaccessible to more traditional ex-situ methods. The aims of this review are to (1) summarize current knowledge of anaerobic microbes that debrominate PBDEs and their associated synergistic partnerships with non-dehalogenating microbes; (2) explore current understandings of the metabolic reductive debromination of PBDE congeners; (3) discuss recent discoveries on dehalogenase genes involved in debromination of PBDEs.Entities:
Keywords: debromination pathways; flame retardants; organohalides; polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs); reductive debromination; reductive dehalogenase genes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29971048 PMCID: PMC6018424 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.01292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Physical properties of PBDE mixtures.
| Molecular weight | Mixture | Mixture | 959.22 |
| Color | Clear, amber to pale yellow | Off-white | Off-white |
| Physical state | Highly viscous liquid | Powder | Powder |
| Melting point | −7 to −3°C (commercial) | 85–89°C (commercial); 200°C (range, 167–257); 79–87°C; 170–220°C | 290–306°C |
| Boiling point | >300°C (decomposition starts above 200°C) | Decomposes at >330°C (commercial) | Decomposes at >320, >400, and 425°C |
| Density (g/mL) | 2.28 at 25°C; 2.25–2.28 | 2.76; 2.8 (commercial) | 3.0; 3.25 |
| – Water | 13.3 μg/L (commercial); | < 1 ppb at 25°C (commercial); | < 0.1 μg/L |
| 2.4 μg/L (pentabromodiphenyl ether component); | 1.98 μg/L (heptabromodiphenyl ether component) | ||
| 10.9 μg/L (tetrabromodiphenyl ether component) | |||
| – Organic solvent(s) | 10 g/kg methanol; miscible in toluene | Acetone (20 g/L); benzene (200 g/L); methanol (2 g/L)—all at 25°C | d-limonene (0.1823 g/100 g solvent); n-propanol (0.1823 g/100 g solvent)—all at 20°C * |
| – Log Kow | 6.64–6.97; 6.57 (commercial) | 6.29 (commercial) | 6.265 |
| – Log Koc | 4.89–5.10 | 5.92–6.22 | 6.8 |
| Vapor pressure | 2.2 × 10−7−5.5 × 10−7 mm Hg at 25°C; 3.5 × 10−7 mm Hg (commercial) | 9.0 × 10−10–1.7 × 10−9 mm Hg at 25°C; 4.9 × 10−8 mm Hg at 21°C (commercial) | 3.2 × 10−8 mm Hg |
| Henry's Law constant (atm-m3/mole) | 1.2 × 10−5; 1.2 × 10−6; 3.5 × 10−6 | 7.5 × 10−8; 2.6 × 10−7 | 1.62 × 10−6; 1.93 × 10−8; 1.2 × 10−8; 4.4 × 10−8 |
Adapted from ATSDR (.
Figure 1Compositions of representative penta-, octa-, and deca-BDE mixtures. Congeners below 2% (w/w) are considered as others. As a result of the chemical process used to generate PBDE mixtures, the exact congener composition remains undefined and may vary significantly between different manufacturers and production batches (La Guardia et al., 2006).
Figure 2Phylogenetic analysis of PBDE debrominating bacteria. The tree was constructed with MEGA 7 (Kumar et al., 2016) using Neighbor-joining method in Kimura 2-parameter mode (Kimura, 1980). ∧, derived from same culture, **require auxiliary substrate, +only in mixed culture.
PBDE debrominating cultures.
| Pure cultures | Anaerobic sewage digestor sludge | TCE | No | hepta- through tetra- | N.A. | 6 months | He et al., | ||
| Isolate from G | TCE | N.A. | penta- tetra- | tetra- | Minimal conversion; Lost octa-BDE debromination activity of parent culture, G, which can only be resumed by co-cultivating AG and DG; | Octa-BDEs 5 months; penta-BDEs 1 month | Ding et al., | ||
| Isolate from G | Lactate | N.A. | penta- tetra- | penta- through di- | |||||
| Saale river sediment | n-ZVI | 20% conversion to diphenyl ether | N.A. | N.A. | No debromination of deca-BDE by CBDB1 without addition of n-ZVI; the role of CBDB1 in this study is uncertain due to pH and unbalanced hydrogen consumption. | 1 month | Xu et al., | ||
| Isolate from co-culture, GY2, sand, and silt near Lianjiang River | No | N.A. | N.A. | Diphenyl ether | GY2 share the same debromination activity with its isolate GY50; Complete debromination; | 2 weeks | Lee et al., | ||
| Variant of GY50 after consecutive transfer in TCE | No | N.A. | N.A. | Di- | A genome island where | 2 weeks | |||
| 2,3-CP dehalogenating compost soil | 3-chloro-4-hyxdroxybenzoate | Similar debromination profile as ANAS195 (data not shown) | N.A. | Robrock et al., | |||||
| Freshwater sediments-pond | 3-chloro-4-hydroxphenylacetate | Similar debromination profile as ANAS195 (data not shown) | N.A. | Robrock et al., | |||||
| A mixture of pentachlorophenol contaminated soil and anaerobic sewage sludge | pentachlorophenol | N.A. | hepta- hexa- penta- | penta 99 to tetra, tri, di; tetra 47 to tri and di | Debromination pathways were identified by spiking individual congeners; para- and meta-removal is preferred; debromination for higher brominated BDEs are slower; | 3 months | Robrock et al., | ||
| Anaerobic Rhine river sediment and ground anaerobic granular sludge | PCE | N.A. | hepta- hexa- penta- | penta 99 to tetra-; tetra47 to tri and di | 3 months | Robrock et al., | |||
| Activated sludge | TCE | Octa- Hepta- | No | N.A. | 2 months | He et al., | |||
| Mixed Cultures | Culture G | Soil samples from a river bank in Wisconsin | TCE | N.A. | hexa-, penta-, tetra-(dominant), tri- | penta- through di- | octa-BDEs 5 months; penta-BDEs 1 month | Ding et al., | |
| EC195 | Highly enriched 195 containing autotrophic culture | TCE | No | hepta- hexa- penta- tetra- di- | N.A. | Additional one hexa and two penta, as well as tetra and di congeners produced compared with strain 195 | 3 months | He et al., | |
| ANAS195 | An enrichment culture with strain 195 | TCE | No | hepta- through di- | N.A. | Faster and more extensive debromination compared with strain195 | 3 months | He et al., | |
| EC195+BAV1 | EC195 with strain BAV1 | TCE | No | tetra- tri- di- | N.A. | BAV1 shows no debromination on deca- or octa-BDEs. More extensive debromination compared with EC195 suggests BAV1 can debrominate lesser brominated PBDEs | 3 months | He et al., | |
| Microcosms | Plug-flow bioreactor with colonization water from wetland near munition dump | No | N.A. | N.A. | N.A. | Di-BDE 15 to mono-BDE 3 and diphenyl ether | 12% and 61% conversion with HRT 3.4 h and 6.8 h, respectively | Rayne et al., | |
| Sewage sludge from mesophilic digester in Dubendorf, Switzerland | 4-bromobenzoic acid, 2,6-dibromobiphenyl, tetrabromobisphenyl A, hexabromocyclododecan, and decabromobiphenyl | Nona- Octa- | N.A. | N.A. | 238 days | Gerecke et al., | |||
| Loam sediment from Celey Bog Park, West Lafayette, IN, USA | Methanol and dextrose | Nona- through Hexa- | N.A. | Tetra- Tri- | 8 months for penta- and tetra-BDEs, 3.5 years for deca-BDE | Tokarz et al., | |||
| A few soils and sediments from multiple locations in China, Singapore, and US | No | N.A. | Hexa- Penta- Tetra- | N.A. | 2 months | Lee and He, | |||
| TCE | N.A. | Hexa- through di- | N.A. | ||||||
| Sediments at the riverside of Lianjiang Rriver, Guiyu, E-recycling town in China | No | Nona- through tri-BDE | N.A. | N.A. | Too ambitious to correlate | 3 months | Qiu et al., | ||
| A few sediment slurries from mangrove, fresh water ponds, and marine subsurface sediments, Hongkong SAR | No | No | N.A. | Hexa 153 to hexa-, penta-, tetra-, tri-, and di-; tetra 47 to tri- | 90 days for tetra 47; 7.6 to 165 days for hexa 153 | Zhu et al., | |||
| River sediment from Erren River, Taiwan (heavily contaminated rivers) | No | Nono-through mono-BDE | N.A. | N.A. | 6 months | Huang et al., | |||
| Wastewater sludge samples, Hrade Kralove and Brno | No | A relative distribution of individual congeners changed with a significance increase of tetra 49 | A mixture of mono-through hepta BDEs was spiked. | 15 months | Stiborova et al., | ||||
| E-waste contaminated soils | Lactate | Deca-209 and tetra 47 decrease while penta-99, hexa-154, 153, and hepta 183 increase at significant levels | PBDEs contamination already exist in soils samples; iron-reducing conditions | ||||||
| Mangrove sediment from Guandu and Bali, Taiwan | No | Nona-through di- | N.A. | N.A. | 75 days | Yang et al., | |||
| Subsurface sediment from mature mangrove forest in Maipo, Hongkong SAR | No | N.A. | N.A. | Tetra- 47 to tri, di- | Biochar accelerates PBDEs' reductive debromination in electron transfer among microbial populations. Abundance of dehalogenating populations were enriched | 20 weeks | Chen et al., | ||
Figure 3Debromination pathways of PBDEs in mixed and pure microbial cultures.
Figure 4Phylogenetic analysis of functionally characterized RDases (blue color) in Dehalococcoides mccartyi including orthologs (black color) of PBDE reductive dehalogenases (red color). The tree was constructed with MEGA 7 (Kumar et al., 2016) using maximum likelihood method in JTT matrix-based model (Jones et al., 1992).