ACTIVITY AND ADAPTATION OF NITRILOTRIACETATE (NTA)-DEGRADING BACTERIA - FIELD AND LABORATORY STUDIES

被引:27
作者
MCFETERS, GA [1 ]
EGLI, T [1 ]
WILBERG, E [1 ]
ALDER, A [1 ]
SCHNEIDER, R [1 ]
SUOZZI, M [1 ]
GIGER, W [1 ]
机构
[1] FED INST WATER RESOURCES & WATER POLLUT CONTROL, CH-8600 DUBENDORF, SWITZERLAND
基金
美国国家航空航天局;
关键词
adaptation; biodegradation; NTA;
D O I
10.1016/0043-1354(90)90137-U
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Adaptation of bacterial activity for the degradation of nitrilotriacetate (NTA) was studied using natural sediment samples and an NTA-degrading bacterium (strain ATCC 29600). Sediment samples from a river with persistent levels of NTA had much higher NTA-degradative activity than comparable samples from a less contaminated control site. When sediment from the control site was exposed to high levels of NTA a 5 day lag preceded an abrupt increase in NTA degradation while strain 29600 colonized on sand and grown in the absence of NTA became induced within eight hours. The induction of strain 29600 was compared between bacteria in suspension and cells attached to sand. The sand-associated bacteria became induced 4 to 5 h before the planktonic suspension and displayed over threefold greater specific activity. Suspensions of strain 29600 became adapted within 8 h when placed in membrane diffusion chambers that were immersed within a municipal wastewater reactor containing NTA. These findings support the concept that induction is a part of the process of bacterial adaptation to degrade NTA and sand-associated bacteria can adapt more quickly to and have a greater degradative activity for NTA than planktonic cells. © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:875 / 881
页数:7
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [21] Dynamics of MTBE-degrading activity in porous media using a large-scale laboratory experiment
    Lesser, Luis E.
    ENVIRONMENTAL EARTH SCIENCES, 2011, 63 (03) : 633 - 639
  • [22] Effect of microorganisms on degradation of fluopyram and tebuconazole in laboratory and field studies
    Podbielska, Magdalena
    Kus-Liskiewicz, Malgorzata
    Jagusztyn, Bartosz
    Szpyrka, Ewa
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2023, 30 (16) : 47727 - 47741
  • [23] Microbial degradation of the brominated flame retardant TBNPA by groundwater bacteria: laboratory and field study
    Balaban, Noa
    Bernstein, Anat
    Gelman, Faina
    Ronen, Zeev
    CHEMOSPHERE, 2016, 156 : 367 - 373
  • [24] Isolation and characterization of thermotolerant hydrocarbon degrading bacteria which sustained the activity at extreme salinity and high osmotic conditions
    Hosseini, Saman
    Sharifi, Rouhallah
    Habibi, Alireza
    Beheshti-AleAgha, Ali
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 2025, 14 (01) : 37 - 46
  • [25] Characteristic Assessment of Diesel-degrading Bacteria Immobilized on Natural Organic Carriers in Marine Environment: the Degradation Activity and Nutrient
    Xue, Jianliang
    Wu, Yanan
    Liu, Zhixiu
    Li, Menglu
    Sun, Xiyu
    Wang, Huajun
    Liu, Bing
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2017, 7
  • [26] DNA stable isotope probing reveals contrasted activity and phenanthrene-degrading bacteria identity in a gradient of anthropized soils
    Lemmel, Florian
    Maunoury-Danger, Florence
    Leyval, Corinne
    Cebron, Aurelie
    FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY, 2019, 95 (12)
  • [27] A Comparative Study on Biosurfactant Activity of Crude Oil-Degrading Bacteria and Its Correlation to Total Petroleum Hydrocarbon Degradation
    Phan, Chia-Wei
    Abu Bakar, Nur Faizah
    Hamzah, Ainon
    BIOREMEDIATION JOURNAL, 2013, 17 (04) : 240 - 251
  • [28] Spore cells from BPA degrading bacteria Bacillus sp GZB displaying high laccase activity and stability for BPA degradation
    Das, Ranjit
    Li, Guiying
    Mai, Bixian
    An, Taicheng
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 640 : 798 - 806
  • [29] Biodegradation studies and sequencing of microcystin-LR degrading bacteria isolated from a drinking water biofilter and a fresh water lake
    Eleuterio, Lazaro
    Batista, Jacimaria R.
    TOXICON, 2010, 55 (08) : 1434 - 1442
  • [30] Field observations on the variability of crude oil impact on indigenous hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria from sub-Antarctic intertidal sediments
    Delille, D
    Delille, B
    MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2000, 49 (05) : 403 - 417