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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 1999, p. 1161-1167, Vol. 65, No. 3
Subdepartment of Environmental Technology,
Department of Agricultural, Environmental and Systems Technology,
Wageningen Agricultural University, 6703 HD Wageningen, The
Netherlands
Received 8 June 1998/Accepted 15 December 1998
The effects of acetate, benzoate, and periods without substrate on
the anaerobic degradation of terephthalate
(1,4-benzene-dicarboxylate) by a syntrophic methanogenic culture were
studied. The culture had been enriched on terephthalate and was
capable of benzoate degradation without a lag phase. When incubated
with a mixture of benzoate and terephthalate, subsequent
degradation with preference for benzoate was observed. Both
benzoate and acetate inhibited the anaerobic degradation of
terephthalate. The observed inhibition is partially
irreversible, resulting in a decrease (or even a complete loss)
of the terephthalate-degrading activity after complete degradation of benzoate or acetate. Irreversible inhibition was characteristic for terephthalate degradation only
because the inhibition of benzoate degradation by acetate could well be
described by reversible noncompetitive product inhibition.
Terephthalate degradation was furthermore irreversibly inhibited by
periods without substrate of only a few hours. The inhibition of
terephthalate degradation due to periods without substrate
could be overcome through incubation of the culture with a mixture of
benzoate and terephthalate. In this case no influence of a
period without substrate was observed. Based on these observations it
is postulated that decarboxylation of terephthalate,
resulting in the formation of benzoate, is strictly dependent on the
concomitant fermentation of benzoate. In the presence of higher
concentrations of benzoate, however, benzoate is the favored substrate
over terephthalate, and the culture loses its ability to
degrade terephthalate. In order to overcome the inhibition
of terephthalate degradation by benzoate and acetate, a
two-stage reactor system is suggested for the treatment of wastewater
generated during terephthalic acid production.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Role of Benzoate in Anaerobic Degradation
of Terephthalate
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Wageningen
Agricultural University, Department of Agricultural, Environmental and
Systems Technology, Subdepartment of Environmental Technology,
"Biotechnion" Bomenweg 2, 6703 HD Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Phone: (31-317) 483798. Fax: (31-317) 482108. E-mail:
robbert.kleerebezem{at}algemeen.mt.wau.nl.
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