Title of article
Biodegradation analyses of trichloroethylene (TCE) by bacteria and its use for biosensing of TCE
Author/Authors
Chee، نويسنده , , Gab-Joo، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
5
From page
1778
To page
1782
Abstract
Trichloroethylene (TCE) is a toxic, recalcitrant groundwater pollutant. TCE-degrading microorganisms were isolated from various environments. The aerobic bacteria isolated from toluene- and tryptophan-containing media were Pseudomonas sp. strain ASA86 and Burkholderia sp. strain TAM17, respectively; these are necessary for inducing TCE biodegradation in a selective medium. The half-degradation time of TCE to a concentration of 1 mg/L was 18 h for strain ASA86 and 7 days for strain TAM17. While identifying toluene/TCE degradation genes, we found that in strain ASA86, the gene was the same as the todC1 gene product encoding toluene dioxygenase identified in Pseudomonas putida F1, and that in strain TAM17, the gene was similar to the tecA1 gene product encoding chlorobenzene dioxygenase identified in Burkholderia sp. PS12. A novel TCE biosensor was developed using strain ASA86 as the inducer of toluene under aerobic conditions. The TCE biosensor exhibited a linear relationship below 3 ppm TCE. Detection limit of the biosensor was 0.05 ppm TCE. The response time of the biosensor was less than 10 min. The biosensor response displayed a constant level during a 2 day period. The TCE biosensor displayed sufficient sensitivity for monitoring TCE in environmental systems.
Keywords
Biosensor , Toluene , Tryptophan , TRICHLOROETHYLENE , Pseudomonas sp. strain ASA86 , Burkholderia sp. strain TAM17
Journal title
Talanta
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Talanta
Record number
1663248
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