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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2001, p. 4471-4478, Vol. 67, No. 10
Sub-Department of Environmental
Technology1 and Laboratory of
Microbiology,2 Wageningen University, 6700 EV
Wageningen, The Netherlands, and Department of Chemical and
Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
85721-00113
Received 10 May 2001/Accepted 6 July 2001
The anaerobic microbial oxidation of toluene to
CO2 coupled to humus respiration was demonstrated by use of
enriched anaerobic sediments from the Amsterdam petroleum harbor (APH)
and the Rhine River. Both highly purified soil humic acids (HPSHA) and
the humic quinone moiety model compound anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate
(AQDS) were utilized as terminal electron acceptors. After 2 weeks of incubation, 50 and 85% of added uniformly labeled
[13C]toluene were recovered as
13CO2 in HPSHA- and AQDS-supplemented APH
sediment enrichment cultures, respectively; negligible recovery
occurred in unsupplemented cultures. The conversion of
[13C]toluene agreed with the high level of recovery of
electrons as reduced humus or as anthrahydroquinone-2,6-disulfonate.
APH sediment was also able to use nitrate and amorphous manganese dioxide as terminal electron acceptors to support the anaerobic biodegradation of toluene. The addition of substoichiometric amounts of
humic acids to bioassay reaction mixtures containing amorphous ferric
oxyhydroxide as a terminal electron acceptor led to more than 65%
conversion of toluene (1 mM) after 11 weeks of incubation, a result
which paralleled the partial recovery of electron equivalents as
acid-extractable Fe(II). Negligible conversion of toluene and reduction
of Fe(III) occurred in these bioassay reaction mixtures when humic
acids were omitted. The present study provides clear quantitative
evidence for the mineralization of an aromatic hydrocarbon by
humus-respiring microorganisms. The results indicate that humic substances may significantly contribute to the intrinsic bioremediation of anaerobic sites contaminated with priority pollutants by serving as
terminal electron acceptors.
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.10.4471-4478.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Anaerobic Mineralization of Toluene by
Enriched Sediments with Quinones and Humus as Terminal
Electron Acceptors
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Sub-Department
of Environmental Technology, Wageningen University, Bomenweg 2, P.O. Box 8129, 6700 EV Wageningen, The Netherlands. Phone: 31-317-483344. Fax: 31-317-482108. E-mail:
francisco.cervantes{at}algemeen.mt.wau.nl.
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