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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 8864-8872, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.8864-8872.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Georgina Fabro,
María E. Alvarez, and
Carlos E. Argaraña*
Centro de Investigaciones en Química Biológica de Córdoba (CIQUIBIC), CONICET, Departamento de Química Biológica, Facultad de Ciencias Químicas, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Ciudad Universitaria, Córdoba, Argentina
Received 4 June 2005/ Accepted 12 September 2005
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So far, several 2,4-DNT-degrading strains have been isolated from 2,4-DNT-contaminated sites (22, 25). Although apparently all degrading strains that have been isolated use the same degradation pathway (Fig. 1A) (22), at present genetic characterization of the 2,4-DNT degradation pathway has been carried out only for Burkholderia sp. strain DNT and Burkholderia cepacia strain R34. In these strains, the degradative genes are organized into an upper pathway and a lower pathway and are located in plasmids pJS1 and pJS311, respectively (Fig. 1B) (15, 27). The upper pathway dntAaAbAcAd and dntB genes, encoding 2,4-DNT dioxygenase and 4-methyl-5-nitrocathecol (4M5NC) monooxygenase, respectively, are responsible for hydroxylation of the aromatic ring and elimination of nitro substituents (12, 16, 27, 28). The resulting compound, 2-hydroxy-5-methylquinone (2H5MQ), is converted to 2,4,5-trihydroxytoluene (2,4,5-THT) by a nonspecific reductase. The gene encoding this enzyme is designated dntC and has not been isolated so far (16, 27). Finally, the lower pathway operon, encoding a 2,4,5-THT oxygenase (dntD), a coenzyme A (CoA)-dependent methylmalonate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (dntE), and a bifunctional isomerase/hydrolase (dntG), is responsible for extradiol fission of the aromatic ring, catalyzing the production of 2,4-dihydroxy-5-methyl-6-oxo-2,4-hexadienoic acid (DMOHA) and subsequent degradation of this compound to pyruvate and propionyl-CoA (13, 15, 16).
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FIG. 1. (A) Proposed pathway for 2,4-DNT degradation in B. cepacia strain R34. The pathway includes the following enzymes: DntA, 2,4-DNT dioxygenase; DntB, 4M5NC monooxygenase; DntC, 2H5MQ reductase; DntD, 2,4,5-THT oxygenase; DntG, DMOHA isomerase/4-hydroxy-2-keto-5-methyl-6-oxo-3-hexenoate hydrolase; and DntE, methylmalonate semialdehyde dehydrogenase. NO2, nitrite; CoASH, coenzyme A (16). (B) dnt genes for 2,4-DNT degradation in Burkholderia sp. strain DNT and B. cepacia strain R34. The schematic diagrams of the pJS1 and pJS311 plasmids show the dnt genes isolated from strains DNT and R34, respectively. The solid regions represent the dnt genes transferred to P. fluorescens RE.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids
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Megaplasmid pJS1 conjugation assay.
Biparental mating was performed as previously described (6) using Burkholderia sp. strain DNT as the donor and the chloramphenicol-resistant organism P. fluorescens WT as the recipient strain. P.fluorescens transconjugants were isolated by plating cultures on chloride-free agar medium (19) supplemented with 60 µg/ml chloramphenicol and 0.5 mM 2,4-DNT.
PCR amplification and subcloning of dnt genes.
The dntAbAcAd genes were obtained from plasmid pJS37 (Table 1) by PCR amplification of a 2.7-kb fragment encoding the enzyme components DntAbAcAd without the ferredoxin oxidoreductase DntAa, which has been shown to be unnecessary for 2,4-DNT dioxygenase activity (28). The primers used were dntA-for (5'-AACTTCGAGCAGGACTTGCC-3') and dntA-rev (5'-CTCACAGGAAGATCATCAGG-3'). The dntD gene (1.2 kb) was amplified from plasmid pJS76 (Table 1) using the following primers: dntD-for (5'-ATGAATTCTCCGAAATGCGGCCGCCTGATGAGG-3') (an engineered NotI site is underlined) and dntD-rev (5'-TAGATCTCGAGCCAGGACATCTGTGTC-3'). The lower pathway operon (4.7 kb), which includes dntD, dntE, ORF13 (encoding a putative NADH-dependent reductase with an unknown role in 2,4-DNT degradation), and dntG, was amplified from plasmid pJS325 (Table 1) using primers dntLP-for (5'-CGAGATGACCGAGCGTGCCTAC-3') and dntLP-rev (5'-CTGGATCGGCTGGACTAACTCG-3'). For further manipulation, all PCR products were initially cloned into the pGEM-T Easy vector, generating plasmids pMRM1 (dntAbAcAd), pMRM2 (dntD), and pMRM3 (lower pathway operon) (Table 1).
It should be mentioned that the promoter region of the dnt genes has not been characterized so far. All dnt gene constructions used in this work except the dntAbAcAd construction included a 5' untranslated sequence which could contain a promoter region.
Construction of pUT mini-Tn5 delivery vectors.
To obtain pUT-MRM1, the 2.7-kb dntAbAcAd genes present in plasmid pMRM1 were isolated by digestion with NotI and introduced into the unique NotI site of pUT mini-Tn5 Hgr (6). pUT-MRM2 was constructed in two steps. First, a 1.2-kb EcoRI-XhoI fragment from pMRM2 containing the dntD gene was ligated with EcoRI-XhoI-digested vector pGEMEX-1, producing pMRM4. Then the dntB gene (2.2 kb) obtained by ApaI digestion of plasmid pJS53 (Table 1) was cloned into an ApaI restriction site of pMRM4, generating pMRM5. Subsequently, a 3.4-kb NotI fragment containing the dntB and dntD genes from pMRM5 was cloned into a NotI restriction site of pUT mini-Tn5 Kmr (6) to obtain pUT-MRM2. To construct pUT-MRM3, a 4.7-kb NotI fragment including the lower pathway operon was obtained from pMRM3 and introduced into the NotI restriction site of pUT mini-Tn5 Gmr (32).
pUT-MRM vector conjugation assays.
Transfer of each pUT-MRM plasmid to P. fluorescens WT was performed with the donor E. coli S17-1 strain by biparental conjugation using the filter mating method (6). P. fluorescens pUT-MRM1, pUT-MRM2, and pUT-MRM3 transconjugants were selected on M9 minimal salt (23) agar plates containing 1.25 µg/ml mercuric chloride, 150 µg/ml kanamycin, and 5 µg/ml gentamicin, respectively. In the first step, we transferred dntAbAcAd and dntB-D by successive pUT-MRM1 and pUT-MRM2 conjugation events. The P. fluorescens recombinant strain was able to transform 2,4-DNT, but it accumulated the DntD product DMOHA. In order to obtain complete degradative capability, this strain was then used as a recipient for transfer of the dnt lower operon (pUT-MRM3). Chromosomal integration of dnt genes was confirmed by Southern blotting and PCR amplification, and the DntA, DntB, and DntD enzyme activities were confirmed by the microplate activity assay (27). To confirm authentic transposition of the mobile elements, the transconjugants were tested for sensitivity to piperacillin (6).
Analytical methods.
2,4-DNT and the degradation products were analyzed by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Cells were removed from the culture medium by centrifugation, and the supernatant fluid was injected into an Allsphere ODS-1 column (5 µm; 250 by 4.6 mm; Alltech) with 13.5 mM trifluoroacetic acid-acetonitrile (50:50) as the mobile phase. To analyze 2,4-DNT and 4M5NC, the flow rate was 1.0 ml/min, and the compounds were detected by UV absorbance at 254 nm with a Spectra-Physics variable-wavelength detector (Westshore Technologies). To analyze 2H5MQ, 2,4,5-THT and DMOHA, the flow rate was 0.5 ml/min; these compounds were detected at 268 nm.
The nitrite concentration in culture fluid was analyzed spectrophotometrically using Griess reagents (Britania, Buenos Aries, Argentina). Briefly, cell-free culture medium (200 µl) was mixed with each Griess reagent (100 µl), and the absorbance at 550 nm was determined after incubation in the dark for 15 min.
Evaluation of 2,4-DNT toxicity for plant growth in the presence of bacteria.
Arabidopsis thaliana (Col-0 ecotype) and Nicotiana tabacum cv. petit havana seeds were surface sterilized by soaking them in 2.5% (vol/vol) sodium hypochloride, rinsed four times with sterilized water, and vernalized at 4°C for 24 h on 0.1% phytoagar (33). To analyze the effect of bacteria on in vitro germination, plates of Gamborg's medium (33) with or without 2,4-DNT (200 µM) were inoculated with 2 x 108 CFU/ml of P. fluorescens WT, P. fluorescens RE, or Burkholderia sp. strain DNT (previously grown in BN medium with 0.1% yeast extract and 0.2% succinate) and incubated at 28°C for 2 h. Vernalized seeds were transferred to these plates, incubated at 22°C, and maintained in plant growth chambers with a photoperiod consisting of 9 h of light and 15 h of darkness. To analyze the effect of bacteria on in vitro A. thaliana plant growth, 2.5 x 107 CFU/ml of Burkholderia sp. strain DNT, Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato, or P.fluorescens RE (previously grown in LB media and washed twice with distilled water) was added to Murashige and Skoog basal medium plates containing 15-day-old plants grown in vitro (1, 33).
For soil assays, flasks containing nonsterile planting mixture (ratio of soil to vermiculite, 1:1 [wt/wt]) were supplemented with sterile double-distilled water or 2,4-DNT (final concentration, 500 µM) and shaken at 200 rpm for 20 min. Bacterial cultures (P. fluorescens WT, P. fluorescens RE, and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT) were added at a final concentration of 2 x 108 CFU/ml, and the flasks were shaken at 28°C for an additional 20 min. Then the planting mixtures were placed in plastic pots and allowed to stand overnight. Sterile vernalized A.thaliana seeds were sown (45 to 50 seeds/pot), and the pots were incubated at 22°C with cycles consisting of 14 h of light and 10 h of darkness. Alternatively, seeds were coated with bacteria by soaking them in a bacterial suspension (5 x 109 CFU/ml) for 20 h at 28°C. The seeds were then sown on soil to which bacteria were not added and which contained or did not contain 2,4-DNT (500 µM), and the pots were maintained under the conditions described above. Under these conditions germination started 5 days after sowing. Phenotypes were scored daily. The assay was performed in duplicate.
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Construction of the recombinant P. fluorescens strain RE by chromosomal insertion of dnt genes.
Subsequently, we ascertained whether chromosomal integration of dnt genes into P.fluorescens WT was sufficient to completely degrade 2,4-DNT and led to a stable degradation capacity. To do this, we constructed three mini-Tn5 transposon delivery vectors, pUT-MRM1, pUT-MRM2, and pUT-MRM3, to perform chromosomal insertion of the structural genes encoding the enzymes described for the 2,4-DNT pathway from Burkholderia sp. strain DNT and B. cepacia R34 (dntAbAcAd, dntB, and the lower pathway operon) (Fig. 1B). It is important to point out that the nondegrading P. fluorescens WT strain catalyzed the conversion of 2H5MQ to 2,4,5-THT, indicating that it had a nonspecific 2H5MQ reductase activity (DntC).
In this way, a recombinant strain, designated P. fluorescens RE, was developed by successive dnt gene transposition events. After this, we analyzed the effect of dnt gene integration on P.fluorescens RE metabolism by comparing the growth rate of this strain with that of the P. fluorescens WT strain in different media, such as LB medium and BN medium supplemented with succinate, valine, or pyruvate. No differences in the growth rate were observed in any of the media analyzed (not shown), suggesting that no major metabolic changes were caused by chromosomal insertion of the dnt modules.
Characterization of the 2,4-DNT-degrading ability of P. fluorescens RE.
The P. fluorescens RE recombinant strain was then investigated with respect to the 2,4-DNT degradative phenotype. In 2,4-DNT degradation assays, in which cells from stationary-phase cultures were used, net disappearance of 2,4-DNT was observed (not shown). Moreover, the intermediates 4M5NC, 2H5MQ, and 2,4,5-THT were not detected, and only a small amount of DMOHA was found (
3% of the initial 2,4-DNT concentration), indicating that there was expression of the complete 2,4-DNT degradation pathway in P. fluorescens RE, which was clearly sufficient to completely degrade 2,4-DNT in this heterologous system.
Then we asked whether P. fluorescens RE was capable of growing with 2,4-DNT as the sole source of nitrogen (Fig. 2A). Following batch culture incubation in nitrogen-free medium supplemented with 2,4-DNT and succinate, we observed that 2,4-DNT degradation was accompanied by concomitant growth on the nitroaromatic compound as the nitrogen source (Fig. 2A). No nitrite accumulation was detected under these conditions (not shown). In addition, in an equivalent nitrogen-free medium with a fixed succinate concentration, clear increases in growth were observed with increases in the 2,4-DNT concentration up to 250 µM (Fig. 2B), but no additional increases in growth were observed at concentrations above 250 µM, probably due to an inhibitory effect of 2,4-DNT or to limiting carbon source availability under these conditions. In contrast, the P. fluorescens WT strain was not able to grow under any of these conditions (Fig. 2B).
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FIG. 2. Growth and 2,4-DNT degradation properties of P. fluorescens RE. (A) Optical density at 600 nm (OD600) () and 2,4-DNT concentration ( ) in a culture of P. fluorescens RE containing nitrogen-free Bruhn medium supplemented with 0.1% succinate and 250 µM 2,4-DNT. (B) Maximum optical densities at 600 nm reached by the P. fluorescens RE () and P. fluorescens WT ( ) strains in cultures containing Bruhn medium supplemented with 0.1% succinate and different initial concentrations of 2,4-DNT. (C and D) Optical densities at 600 nm (C) and concentrations of 2,4-DNT (D) in cultures of P. fluorescens RE containing BN medium with 400 µM 2,4-DNT ( ) supplemented with 0.1% succinate (succ) ( ) or 0.1% yeast extract (YE) ( ). The symbols indicate averages of triplicate cultures, and the error bars indicate standard deviations.
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When tested in the presence of different cosubstrates, P.fluorescens RE was capable of growing (Fig. 2C) and degrading the nitroaromatic compound more efficiently (Fig. 2D). This phenomenon was observed with succinate (Fig. 2C and D), as well as with other simple carbon sources, such as glucose, pyruvate, and glutamate (not shown). Moreover, notably improved degradation was obtained when a complex carbon and nitrogen source, such as yeast extract (Fig. 2D) or soybean peptone, was added (not shown). Yeast extract was the most efficient cosubstrate on a g/liter basis, indicating that there was a correlation between cosubstrate complexity and the velocity of 2,4-DNT degradation.
Stability of 2,4-DNT degradative phenotype of P. fluorescens RE.
In addition, the 2,4-DNT-degrading ability acquired after chromosomal insertion of the dnt genes was analyzed by long-term incubation in LB medium without 2,4-DNT and selective markers. All P. fluorescens RE cells exhibited the chromosomally encoded DntA and DntB activities, as well as resistance to the markers included in minitransposons, for more than 18 days (not shown). These results indicate that the 2,4-DNT degradative phenotype in P. fluorescens RE is very stable, an advantage over the unstable plasmid-borne 2,4-DNT-degrading microorganisms P. fluorescens MP and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT.
2,4-DNT degradative abilities of P. fluorescens RE and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT at low temperatures.
One limitation of the use of bacterial strains as degradative vehicles for in situ bioremediation processes is the reduced metabolic activity at low temperatures. In order to investigate whether P. fluorescens RE exhibits cold resistance similar to that of strain WT, we monitored the development of colonies on LB agar plates that were incubated for 8 days at a wide range of temperatures. We observed that the optimal growth temperature of P. fluorescens strain RE was 28°C and that this strain clearly exhibited cold resistance since it was capable of growing at temperatures as low as 5°C (see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material). It should be remarked that the growth of P. fluorescens strain RE at 37°C was totally inhibited and that no colony growth was observed when plates maintained at 37°C were transferred to 28°C, indicating that the exposure to 37°C killed the P. fluorescens RE cells. In contrast, the optimal growth temperature of Burkholderia sp. strain DNT was 37°C, and development of colonies was drastically inhibited at temperatures lower than 16°C (see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material). No Burkholderia sp. strain DNT colony growth was observed after incubation at 37°C of plates that were previously maintained for 8 days at 5°C, showing the susceptibility of this bacterium to low temperatures under the conditions tested.
Next, we tested the 2,4-DNT degradative abilities of P. fluorescens RE and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT at 10°C in liquid cultures containing 2,4-DNT. As shown in Fig. 3A and B, P.fluorescens RE not only was capable of growing at this temperature but was also able to progressively degrade 2,4-DNT during incubation (90% of the initial 2,4-DNT concentration) with no accumulation of intermediates. In contrast, Burkholderia sp. strain DNT growth was drastically reduced at this temperature (Fig. 3A), and there was a decrease in its degradation performance (Fig. 3C). During the initial 20 h of incubation, Burkholderia sp. strain DNT-mediated degradation might have been due to the inoculated cells, which consumed approximately 50% of the 2,4-DNT (Fig. 3C). However, after this time Burkholderia sp. strain DNT lost the capacity to degrade 2,4-DNT, and there was a concomitant accumulation of intermediates. After 56 h of incubation, 92 µM 2,4-DNT, 24 µM 4M5NC, and 15 µM 2H5MQ remained in the medium (Fig. 3C). Considering the initial concentration of 2,4-DNT (185 µM), only 30% of the 2,4-DNT was mineralized. These results demonstrate that at low temperatures 2,4-DNT degradation by P. fluorescens RE is greater than 2,4-DNT degradation by Burkholderia sp. strain DNT.
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FIG. 3. Growth of and 2,4-DNT degradation by P. fluorescens RE and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT at 10°C. (A) Optical densities at 600 nm (OD600) of cultures of P. fluorescens RE () and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT ( ) in nitrogen-free Bruhn medium supplemented with 0.1% yeast extract and 185 µM 2,4-DNT incubated at 10°C. (B and C) Concentrations of 2,4-DNT ( ) and the degradation intermediates 4M5NC ( ) and 2H5MQ () in cultures of P. fluorescens RE (B) and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT (C). The symbols indicate averages of triplicate cultures, and the error bars indicate standard deviations.
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FIG. 4. Relief of 2,4-DNT toxicity for A. thaliana and N. tabacum development in vitro by P. fluorescens RE. (A) Early stages of seedling growth in Gamborgs medium supplemented (+2,4-DNT) or not supplemented (2,4-DNT) with 200 µM 2,4-DNT. Media were either not treated with bacteria (bacteria) or supplemented with the following strains (2 x 108 CFU/ml): P. fluorescens WT, P. fluorescens RE, and Burkholderia sp. strain DNT. Images were taken 10 days after seeds were plated. (Insets) Enlargements of representative seeds or seedlings. Bars = 1 mm. (B) Effects of inoculation of Burkholderia sp. strain DNT onto A. thaliana plants. Fifteen-day-old plants grown in solid medium were incubated with 2.5 x 107 CFU/ml of Burkholderia sp. strain DNT, P. syringae pv. tomato (a pathovar that causes disease and mortality of A. thaliana plants in vitro), and P. fluorescens RE. Images were taken 2 and 12 days after bacterial inoculation (dpi).
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TABLE 2. 2,4-DNT toxicity for A. thaliana seedlings
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FIG. 5. Relief of 2,4-DNT toxicity for A. thaliana growth in soil by P. fluorescens RE. Soils were either supplemented (+2,4-DNT) or not supplemented (2,4-DNT) with 500 µM 2,4-DNT and either not treated with bacteria (bacteria) or supplemented with P. fluorescens WT, P.fluorescens RE, or Burkholderia sp. strain DNT (2 x 108 CFU/ml). A. thaliana vernalized seeds were transferred to soil, and plant growth was recorded for 1 month. Images were taken 30 days after sowing. Several plants were randomly removed to facilitate evaluation of the remaining plants.
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P. fluorescens RE has several advantages over other bacterial systems. First, it maintains the psychrotolerant property of P.fluorescens WT since it can grow at temperatures as low as 5°C. Furthermore, P. fluorescens RE was capable of efficiently degrading 2,4-DNT at 10°C, indicating that the 2,4-DNT-degrading enzymes remain active at this temperature. In contrast, Burkholderia sp. strain DNT exhibited cold sensitivity, and it was unable to sustain a complete degradation process at low temperatures. In this bacterium there was accumulation of toxic 2,4-DNT intermediates that probably had a poisonous effect. In this sense, the advantageous cold resistance of P.fluorescens RE reflects the environmental robustness of this strain, indicating its potential for use as a vehicle for in situ bioremediation processes.
Second, we describe here the capacity of the P. fluorescens RE strain to overcome 2,4-DNT toxicity for plant growth. This protective effect was shown in synthetic medium in which P.fluorescens RE was the only microorganism present, indicating that this strain biodegrades 2,4-DNT in such conditions. In addition, a single inoculation with P. fluorescens RE in nonsterile soils was sufficient to rescue normal plant growth for at least 1 month. A similar effect was observed for the genetically unmodified organism Burkholderia sp. strain DNT. These results led us to assume that in this environment the bacteria survive, that sufficient numbers are maintained, and that in situ expression of dnt genes takes place in both bacterium-plant-soil microcosms. It is important to point out that addition of cosubstrates was not required for 2,4-DNT detoxification in soil, as this process occurs in vitro. However, it is expected that plant exudates could provide a carbon source for the bacteria to grow, allowing proliferation and stimulating the metabolic activity (20). In addition, P. fluorescens RE might compete successfully with other microorganisms for the exudate nutrients and efficiently colonize the plant root. Interestingly, soaking seeds with P. fluorescens RE resulted in relief of 2,4-DNT plant toxicity. This implies that such a seed treatment may allow delivery of the bacterium to the seedling rhizosphere, which in turn could be a successful strategy in a potential rhizoremediation approach. Although further experiments are necessary to analyze these potential properties of the recombinant strain, it is known that Pseudomonas spp. are the most abundant rhizosphere species (20), and several successful rhizoremediation experiments have been carried out with P. fluorescens strains to clean up soils polluted with trichloroethylene and polychlorinated biphenyls (2, 34).
Finally, P. fluorescens RE was found to be harmless for the plant species tested here, A. thaliana and N. tabacum, whereas Burkholderia sp. strain DNT was toxic for A. thaliana development in vitro. In the case of Burkholderia sp. strain DNT and A. thaliana, the bacterium eliminated seed germination and was lethal to the plants when it was inoculated into roots of young plants, and it was more aggressive than the virulent pathogen P. syringae pv. tomato DC3000. The basis of Burkholderia sp. strain DNT toxicity for in vitro A. thaliana development remains to be determined, as do the reasons that this bacterium does not affect plant growth in soil. However, it has been proposed that B. cepacia is a phytopathogen that causes bacterial rot of onions (4). In addition, it is important to be cautious with Burkholderia species since several studies have indicated that virtually all of them can be opportunistic human pathogens in immunocompromised patients and can occasionally infect healthy individuals (5, 21, 30). One important advantage is the fact that P. fluorescens RE growth is drastically reduced at 37°C, which reduces the possibility that it can infect humans or warm-blooded animals.
In conclusion, our results provide evidence that the use of a harmless and psychrotolerant rhizobacterial host for the transfer of 2,4-DNT degradative ability is an interesting approach for generation of biological vehicles for cleaning environments contaminated with this priority pollutant.
This work was supported in part by grants from the Secretaría de Ciencia y Técnica (Universidad Nacional de Córdoba), the Agencia Córdoba Ciencia, the Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Técnica, and Fundación Antorchas.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://aem.asm.org/. ![]()
A.M.S. and C.E.A. contributed equally to this article. ![]()
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