Abstract

Bioremediation of pollutants in natural environments is affected by many factors, such as bacterial survival, motility, and chemotaxis. However, these roles in in-situ biodegradation of organophosphorus pesticides have not been examined extensively. In this paper, a highly effective methyl-parathion (MP) degrading strain, Pseudomonas putida DLL-1, which also demonstrates motile ability and chemotactic response toward MP, was selected as the research material. A leuB − auxotroph mutant A3-27 and fliC − non-motility mutant a4-8 were first constructed by random insertion of the kanamycin gene into the chromosome of P. putida DLL-1 with the mini-transposon system. Biodegradation of MP in liquid medium and soil microcosms by A3-27, a4-8 and a previously constructed cheA − non-chemotaxis mutant P. putida DAK were compared. The kinetic parameters for MP degradation were all similar in the well-mixed liquid systems. However, in soil microcosms, all the three mutants had lower degrading rates compared with wild-type P. putida DLL-1. The auxotroph mutant A3-27 had the lowest degrading rate and could only degrade 25.7–34.2% MP in 5 days, and the non-motility mutant a4-8 and non-chemotaxis mutant DAK could only degrade 53.5–68.1% and 64.3–85.7% MP, respectively. This paper emphasizes, for the first time, the use of non-auxotroph bacteria for efficient removal of organophosphorus pesticides in contaminated sites, and also points out the importance of select microorganisms with specific motile or chemotactic affinities in optimizing pesticide bioremediation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call