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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 08 1996, 2910-2914, Vol 62, No. 8
SD Sutton, SL Pfaller, JR Shann, D Warshawsky, BK Kinkle and JR Vestal
Methylquinolines and related N-heterocyclic aromatic compounds are common
contaminants associated with the use of hydrocarbons in both coal
gasification and wood treatment processes. These compounds have been found
in groundwater, and many are known mutagens. A stable, five- member
bacterial consortium able to degrade 4-methylquinoline was established by
selective enrichment using soil collected from an abandoned coal
gasification site. The consortium was maintained for 5 years by serial
transfer in a medium containing 4-methylquinoline. A gram-negative soil
bacterium, strain Lep1, was isolated from the consortium and shown to
utilize 4-methylquinoline as a source of carbon and energy during growth in
liquid medium. A time course experiment demonstrated that both the isolate
Lep1 and the consortium containing Lep1 were able to degrade
4-methylquinoline under aerobic conditions. Complete degradation of
4-methylquinoline by either strain Lep1 alone or the consortium was
characterized by the production and eventual disappearance of
2-hydroxy-4-methylquinoline, followed by the appearance and persistence of
a second metabolite tentatively identified as a hydroxy-4-methylcoumarin.
Currently, there is no indication that 4-methylquinoline degradation
proceeds differently in the consortium culture compared with Lep1 alone.
This is the first report of 4-methylquinoline biodegradation under aerobic
conditions.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Aerobic biodegradation of 4-methylquinoline by a soil bacterium
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cincinnati, Ohio 45221, USA.
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