Abstract

The persistence and ecotoxicity of carbendazim residues pose a potential risk to environmental ecology and human health. Here, a novel and highly efficient carbendazim-degrading bacterium Rhodococcus sp. CX-1, capable of utilizing carbendazim as its sole source of carbon and energy, was isolated from contaminated soil. The biodegradation characteristics and metabolic pathways were studied by mass spectrometry, genomic annotation, and transcriptome analysis. The degradation rate of carbendazim by strain CX-1 was 3.98–9.90 mg/L/h under different conditions, and the optimum degradation conditions were 40 °C and pH 7.0. The addition of carbon sources (glucose, fructose, and sucrose, 100 mg/L) could accelerate carbendazim degradation. HPLC-MS/MS identification suggested that carbendazim is first hydrolyzed into 2-aminobenzimidazole and then to 2-hydroxybenzimidazole, and is ultimately mineralized to carbon dioxide. The genome of strain CX-1 contained 6,511,628 bp nucleotides, 2 linear plasmids, 2 circular plasmids, and 6437 protein coding genes. Genome annotation and transcriptome analysis indicated that carbendazim degradation may be regulated by the degradation genes harbored in the chromosome and in plasmid 2, and two different degradation pathways of carbendazim by imidazole ring cleavage or benzene ring cleavage were predicted. This study provided new insight to reveal the biodegradation mechanism of carbendazim; furthermore, strain CX-1 is a promising bioresource for carbendazim bioremediation.

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