Abstract

Stenotrophomonas koreensis, was isolated from a textile effluent and employed to biologically degrade 98.8% of the recalcitrant toxic dye malachite green in 4 h in the absence of any supplements or media. Chromatographic and Spectroscopic analysis confirmed the degradation of the dye. According to Response Surface Methodology, the optimum conditions for biodegradation were pH 6, inoculum size 6 mL (initial concentration Log10CFU/mL = 6.2), and temperature 45 °C. More than 98% decolorization was achieved within 2.5 h of the addition of soymeal extract or peptone. One of the most promising features of this strain is that even in the presence of heavy metals, S. koreensis actively degraded the dye. The bacteria biodegraded malachite green following the first-order reaction kinetics. LC-MS analysis of the degradation product yielded several intermediates like Michler’s ketone (m/z 269), 4-N,N-dimethylaminophenol (m/z 137), Benzophenone (m/z 182), N,N-dimethylaniline (m/z 121), 4-(N-methylamino)-benzophenone (m/z 211), 4-aminobenzaldehyde (m/z 121), anionic canonical form of 4-aminobenzaldehyde (m/z 120), 4-(N,N-dimethylamino)benzoic acid (m/z 165), 4-(N-methylamino) benzoic acid (m/z 152). The enzymes responsible for the malachite green degradation were tyrosinase, Malachite Green reductase, and NADH-DCIP reductase. The present work is the first to report the degradation of malachite green by S. koreensis.

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