Aerobic biodegradation of vinyl chloride by a highly enriched mixed culture

被引:0
|
作者
Harvinder Sing
Frank E. Löffler
Babu Z. Fathepure
机构
[1] Oklahoma State University,Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics
[2] Georgia Institute of Technology,School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
来源
Biodegradation | 2004年 / 15卷
关键词
microcosms; mixed culture; oxygen threshold; starvation; vinyl chloride-assimilation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Lower chlorinated compounds such as cis-dichloroethene (cis-DCE) and vinyl chloride (VC) often accumulate in chloroethene-contaminated aquifers due to incomplete reductive dechlorination of higher chlorinated compounds. A highly enriched aerobic culture that degrades VC as a growth substrate was obtained from a chloroethene-contaminated aquifer material. The culture rapidly degraded 50–250 μM aqueous VC to below GC detection limit with a first-order rate constant of 0.2 day−1. Besides VC, the culture also degraded ethene as the sole carbon source. In addition, the culture degraded cis-DCE, but only in the presence of VC. However, no degradation of trans-DCE or TCE occurred either in the presence or absence of VC. The ability of the TRW culture to degrade cis-DCE is significant for natural attenuation since both VC and cis-DCE are often found in chloroethene-contaminated groundwater. Experiments examining the effect of oxygen threshold on VC degradation showed that the culture was able to metabolize VC efficiently at extremely low concentrations of dissolved oxygen (DO). Complete removal of 150 mu;moles of VC occurred in the presence of only 0.2 mmol of oxygen (1.8 mg/L DO). This is important since most groundwater environments contain low DO (1–2 mg/L). Studies showed that the culture was able to withstand long periods of VC starvation. For example, the culture was able to assimilate VC with minimal lag time even after 5 months of starvation. This is impressive from the point of its sustenance under field conditions. Overall the culture is robust and degrades VC to below the detection limit rendering this culture suitable for field application.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 204
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Vinyl chloride biodegradation with methanotrophic attached films
    Nelson, Y.M.
    Jewell, W.J.
    Journal of Environmental Engineering, 1993, 119 (05) : 890 - 907
  • [32] Biodegradation of metformin and guanylurea by aerobic cultures enriched from sludge
    Briones, Rowena M.
    Zhuang, Wei-Qin
    Sarmah, Ajit K.
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION, 2018, 243 : 255 - 262
  • [33] Geochemical Parameters and Reductive Dechlorination Determine Aerobic Cometabolic vs Aerobic Metabolic Vinyl Chloride Biodegradation at Oxic/Anoxic Interface of Hyporheic Zones
    Atashgahi, Siavash
    Lu, Yue
    Ramiro-Garcia, Javier
    Peng, Peng
    Maphosa, Farai
    Sipkema, Detmer
    Dejonghe, Winnie
    Smidt, Hauke
    Springael, Dirk
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2017, 51 (03) : 1626 - 1634
  • [34] Influence of pH and C/N Ratio on Poly(Vinyl Alcohol) Biodegradation in Mixed Bacterial Culture
    Hui Zhen Zhang
    Journal of Polymers and the Environment, 2009, 17 : 286 - 290
  • [35] Influence of pH and C/N Ratio on Poly(Vinyl Alcohol) Biodegradation in Mixed Bacterial Culture
    Zhang, Hui Zhen
    JOURNAL OF POLYMERS AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2009, 17 (04) : 286 - 290
  • [36] Role for acetotrophic methanogens in methanogenic biodegradation of vinyl chloride
    Bradley, PM
    Chapelle, FH
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1999, 33 (19) : 3473 - 3476
  • [37] Biodegradation of plasticized poly(vinyl chloride) containing cellulose
    Kaczmarek, Halina
    Bajer, Krzysztof
    JOURNAL OF POLYMER SCIENCE PART B-POLYMER PHYSICS, 2007, 45 (08) : 903 - 919
  • [38] VINYL-CHLORIDE BIODEGRADATION WITH METHANOTROPHIC ATTACHED FILMS
    NELSON, YM
    JEWELL, WJ
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING-ASCE, 1993, 119 (05): : 890 - 907
  • [39] Modeling aerobic biotransformation of vinyl chloride by vinyl chloride-assimilating bacteria, methanotrophs and ethenotrophs
    Liu, Yiwen
    Ngo, Huu Hao
    Guo, Wenshan
    Sun, Jing
    Wang, Dongbo
    Peng, Lai
    Ni, Bing-Jie
    JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS, 2017, 332 : 97 - 103
  • [40] BIODEGRADATION OF PEAT BY MIXED CULTURE OF MICROORGANISMS
    GLANSER, M
    BAN, SN
    COONEY, CL
    PROCESS BIOCHEMISTRY, 1982, 17 (05) : 19 - +