| Literature DB >> 30407808 |
Long Zhang1, Ping Hang1, Qiang Hu1, Xiao-Long Chen1, Xi-Yi Zhou1, Kai Chen1, Jian-Dong Jiang1,2.
Abstract
Phenylurea herbicides (PHs) are frequently detected as major water contaminants in areas where there is extensive use. In this study, Diaphorobacter sp. strain LR2014-1, which initially hydrolyzes linuron to 3,4-dichloroanaline, and Achromobacter sp. strain ANB-1, which further mineralizes the produced aniline derivatives, were isolated from a linuron-mineralizing consortium despite being present at low abundance in the community. The synergistic catabolism of linuron by the consortium containing these two strains resulted in more efficient catabolism of linuron and growth of both strains. Strain LR2014-1 harbors two evolutionary divergent hydrolases from the amidohydrolase superfamily Phh and the amidase superfamily TccA2, which functioned complementarily in the hydrolysis of various types of PHs, including linuron ( N-methoxy- N-methyl-substituted), diuron, chlorotoluron, fluomethuron ( N, N-dimethyl-substituted), and siduron. These findings show that a bacterial consortium can contain catabolically synergistic species for PH mineralization, and one strain could harbor functionally complementary hydrolases for a broadened substrate range.Entities:
Keywords: amidase; amidohydrolase; bacterial consortium; linuron; phenylurea herbicide; synergistic catabolism
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30407808 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b03703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279