Saltar al contenido
Merck
  • Bioremediation Strategies Aimed at Stimulating Chlorinated Solvent Dehalogenation Can Lead to Microbially-Mediated Toluene Biogenesis.

Bioremediation Strategies Aimed at Stimulating Chlorinated Solvent Dehalogenation Can Lead to Microbially-Mediated Toluene Biogenesis.

Environmental science & technology (2018-07-26)
William M Moe, Samuel J Reynolds, M Aaron Griffin, J Bryan McReynolds
RESUMEN

In situ bioremediation practices that include subsurface addition of fermentable electron donors to stimulate reductive dechlorination by anaerobic bacteria have become widely employed to combat chlorinated solvent contamination in groundwater. At a contaminated site located near Baton Rouge, Louisiana (USA), toluene was transiently observed in groundwater at concentrations that sometimes far exceeded the US drinking water maximum contaminant level (MCL) of 1 mg/L after a fermentable substrate (agricultural feed grade cane molasses) was injected into the subsurface with the intent of providing electron donors for reductive dechlorination. Here, we present data that demonstrate that indigenous microorganisms can biologically produce toluene by converting phenylacetic acid, phenylalanine, phenyllactate, and phenylpyruvate to toluene. When grown in defined medium with phenylacetic acid at concentrations ≤350 mg/L, the molar ratio between toluene accumulated and phenylacetic acid supplied was highly correlated ( R2 ≥ 0.96) with a toluene yield exceeding 0.9:1. Experiments conducted using 13C labeled compounds (phenylacetic acid-2-13C and l-phenylalanine-3-13C) resulted in production of toluene-α-13C, confirming that toluene was synthesized from these precursors by two independently developed enrichment cultures. Results presented here suggest that monitoring of aromatic hydrocarbons is warranted during enhanced bioremediation activities where electron donors are introduced to stimulate anaerobic biotransformation of chlorinated solvents.

MATERIALES
Referencia del producto
Marca
Descripción del producto

Sigma-Aldrich
Sodium phenylpyruvate, powder
Sigma-Aldrich
Phenylacetic acid-2-13C, 99 atom % 13C