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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 2000, p. 1007-1019, Vol. 66, No. 3
Centre for Bioprocessing and Food
Technology1 and School of Life Sciences
and Technology,2 Victoria University of
Technology, Werribee Campus, Melbourne, Australia 8001
Received 21 September 1999/Accepted 4 January 2000
This study investigated the biodegradation of high-molecular-weight
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in liquid media and soil by
bacteria (Stenotrophomonas maltophilia VUN 10,010 and
bacterial consortium VUN 10,009) and a fungus (Penicillium janthinellum VUO 10,201) that were isolated from separate
creosote- and manufactured-gas plant-contaminated soils. The bacteria
could use pyrene as their sole carbon and energy source in a basal
salts medium (BSM) and mineralized significant amounts of
benzo[a]pyrene cometabolically when pyrene was also
present in BSM. P. janthinellum VUO 10,201 could not
utilize any high-molecular-weight PAH as sole carbon and
energy source but could partially degrade these if cultured in
a nutrient broth. Although small amounts of chrysene, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and
dibenz[a,h]anthracene were degraded by
axenic cultures of these isolates in BSM containing a single PAH, such
conditions did not support significant microbial growth or PAH
mineralization. However, significant degradation of, and microbial
growth on, pyrene, chrysene, benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, and
dibenz[a,h]anthracene, each as a single PAH in BSM, occurred when P. janthinellum VUO 10,201 and either
bacterial consortium VUN 10,009 or S. maltophilia VUN
10,010 were combined in the one culture, i.e., fungal-bacterial
cocultures: 25% of the benzo[a]pyrene was mineralized to
CO2 by these cocultures over 49 days, accompanied by
transient accumulation and disappearance of intermediates detected
by high-pressure liquid chromatography. Inoculation of fungal-bacterial
cocultures into PAH-contaminated soil resulted in significantly
improved degradation of high-molecular-weight PAHs,
benzo[a]pyrene mineralization (53% of added
[14C]benzo[a]pyrene was recovered as
14CO2 in 100 days), and reduction in the
mutagenicity of organic soil extracts, compared with the indigenous
microbes and soil amended with only axenic inocula.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Degradation and Mineralization of
High-Molecular-Weight Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons by Defined
Fungal-Bacterial Cocultures
and
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of Life
Sciences and Technology, Victoria University of Technology, Werribee Campus (W008), P.O. Box 14428, Melbourne City MC, Melbourne, Australia 8001. Phone: 61 3 92168104. Fax: 61 3 92168284. E-mail:
Grant.Stanley{at}vu.edu.au.
Present address: Department of Food Science and Agribusiness, The
University of Melbourne, Werribee, Australia 3030.
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