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Degradation of Chlorinated Biphenyl, Dibenzofuran, and Dibenzo-<i>p</i>-dioxin by Marine Bacteria That Degrade Biphenyl, Carbazole, or Dibenzofuran
35
Citations
28
References
2003
Year
EngineeringDegradation ReactionAngular DioxygenationCyanobacteriaBiodegradationEnvironmental ChemistryBioenergeticsMarine Bacterial StrainsMarine PollutionMicrobial EcologyChlorinated BiphenylEnvironmental MicrobiologyStrain Bp-phMarine BacteriaDegrade BiphenylEcotoxicologyChemical PollutionMarine BiotaBiologyMarine BiotechnologyEnvironmental EngineeringMicrobiologyEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicineMicrobiological Degradation
Marine bacterial strains (BP-PH, CAR-SF, and DBF-MAK) were isolated using biphenyl, carbazole (CAR), or dibenzofuran (DF) respectively as substrates for growth. Their 16S ribosomal DNA sequences showed that the species closest to strain BP-PH, strain CAR-SF, and strain DBF-MAK are Alteromonas macleodii (96.3% identity), Neptunomonas naphthovorans (93.1% identity), and Cycloclasticus pugetii (97.3% identity), respectively. The metabolites produced suggested that strain CAR-SF degrades CAR via dioxygenation in the angular position and by the meta-cleavage pathway, and that strain DBF-MAK degrades DF via both lateral and angular dioxygenation. Polychlorinated biphenyl (KC-300) and 2,3-dichlorodibenzo-p-dioxin were partially degraded by strain BP-PH and strain DBF-MAK, while 2,7-dichlorodibenzo-p-dioxin and 2,4,8-trichlorodibenzofuran remained virtually unchanged.
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