Abstract

One of the most frequently used methods for elimination of oil pollution is the use of biological preparations based on oil-degrading microorganisms. Such microorganisms often relate to bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas. Pseudomonads are ubiquitous microorganisms that often have the ability to oxidize various pollutants, including oil hydrocarbons. To date, individual biochemical pathways of hydrocarbon degradation and the organization of the corresponding genes have been studied in detail. Almost all studies of this kind have been performed on degraders of individual hydrocarbons belonging to a single particular class. Microorganisms capable of simultaneous degradation of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons are very poorly studied. Most of the works on such objects have been devoted only to phenotype characteristic and some to genetic studies. To identify the patterns of interaction of several metabolic systems depending on the growth conditions, the most promising are such approaches as transcriptomics and proteomics, which make it possible to obtain a comprehensive assessment of changes in the expression of hundreds of genes and proteins at the same time. This review summarizes the existing data on bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas capable of the simultaneous oxidation of hydrocarbons of different classes (alkanes, monoaromatics, and polyaromatics) and presents the most important results obtained in the studies on the biodegradation of hydrocarbons by representatives of this genus using methods of transcriptomic and proteomic analyses.

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