Title : Complete degradation of di-n-butyl phthalate by Glutamicibacter sp. strain 0426 with a novel pathway - Ren_2023_Biodegradation__ |
Author(s) : Ren C , Wang Y , Wu Y , Zhao HP , Li L |
Ref : Biodegradation , : , 2023 |
Abstract :
Di-n-butyl phthalate (DBP) is widely used as plasticizer that has potential carcinogenic, teratogenic, and endocrine effects. In the present study, an efficient DBP-degrading bacterial strain 0426 was isolated and identified as a Glutamicibacter sp. strain 0426. It can utilize DBP as the sole source of carbon and energy and completely degraded 300 mg/L of DBP within 12 h. The optimal conditions (pH 6.9 and 31.7 degreesC) for DBP degradation were determined by response surface methodology and DBP degradation well fitted with the first-order kinetics. Bioaugmentation of contaminated soil with strain 0426 enhanced DBP (1 mg/g soil) degradation, indicating the application potential of strain 0426 for environment DBP removal. Strain 0426 harbors a distinctive DBP hydrolysis mechanism with two parallel benzoate metabolic pathways, which may account for the remarkable performance of DBP degradation. Sequences alignment has shown that an alpha/beta fold hydrolase (WP_083586847.1) contained a conserved catalytic triad and pentapeptide motif (GX1SX2G), of which function is similar to phthalic acid ester (PAEs) hydrolases and lipases that can efficiently catalyze hydrolysis of water-insoluble substrates. Furthermore, phthalic acid was converted to benzoate by decarboxylation, which entered into two different pathways: one is the protocatechuic acid pathway under the role of pca cluster, and the other is the catechol pathway. This study demonstrates a novel DBP degradation pathway, which broadens our understanding of the mechanisms of PAE biodegradation. |
PubMedSearch : Ren_2023_Biodegradation__ |
PubMedID: 37395851 |
Gene_locus related to this paper: 9micc-a0a5c2fpe7 |
Substrate | Dibutyl-phthalate |
Gene_locus | 9micc-a0a5c2fpe7 |
Ren C, Wang Y, Wu Y, Zhao HP, Li L (2023)
Complete degradation of di-n-butyl phthalate by Glutamicibacter sp. strain 0426 with a novel pathway
Biodegradation
:
Ren C, Wang Y, Wu Y, Zhao HP, Li L (2023)
Biodegradation
: