Journal article
Cyanocobalamin enables activated sludge bacteria to dechlorinate hexachloro-1,3-butadiene to nonchlorinated gases
Bioremediation Journal, Vol.12(4), pp.177-184
2008
Abstract
The ability of activated sludge obtained from a local wastewater treatment plant to dechlorinate hexachloro-1,3-butadiene (HCBD) in the presence of either acetate or lactate and cyanocobalamin was investigated. Results from headspace analysis indicated complete dechlorination of HCBD by the accumulation of fully dechlorinated C4 gases (1-buten-3-yne, 1,3-butadiene, and 1,3-butadiyne). Dechlorination products were not observed in the control cultures without cyanocobalamin. Examination of control cultures revealed that the disappearance of HCBD from the headspace was partly due to adsorption into the biomass. However, the key for dechlorination was the shuttle (cyanocobalamin) rather than specific microbial enzymatic activity. The hypothesis that the bacteria reduced cyanocobalamin, which in turn reductively dechlorinated HCBD, was supported by the finding that cyanocobalamin reduced by zero-valent zinc resulted in complete dechlorination. The significance of the findings is that, in contrast to prior work where specific anaerobic bacteria (enrichments or pure cultures) were believed to be necessary for dechlorination resulting in only partly dechlorinated products, the currect data show that nonspecific aerobic activated sludge bacteria can be employed for complete HCBD dechlorination at rates sufficiently high to be considered for bioremediation projects.
Details
- Title
- Cyanocobalamin enables activated sludge bacteria to dechlorinate hexachloro-1,3-butadiene to nonchlorinated gases
- Authors/Creators
- D.L. James (Author/Creator) - Murdoch UniversityR. Cord-Ruwisch (Author/Creator) - Murdoch UniversityD. Schleheck (Author/Creator) - UNSW SydneyM.J. Lee (Author/Creator) - UNSW SydneyM. Manefield (Author/Creator) - UNSW Sydney
- Publication Details
- Bioremediation Journal, Vol.12(4), pp.177-184
- Publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- Identifiers
- 991005542507207891
- Copyright
- © 2008 Taylor & Francis.
- Murdoch Affiliation
- School of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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