Abstract

A total of 21 bacterial cultures were isolated that could utilize glyphosate (N-phosphonomethyl glycine) as a sole source of phosphorus in a mineral salts medium. Sources of inocula for enrichment cultures included aerobic digester liquid, raw sewage, trickling filter effluent, pesticide disposal pit liquid, and soil. Eleven cultures were identified asPseudomonas sp., one asPseudomonas stutzeri, and nine asAlcaligenes sp. Aminomethylphosphonic acid, the major metabolic intermediate of glyphosate degradation in soil, could also serve as a sole phosphorus source for all 21 isolates. Neither glyphosate nor aminomethylphosphonic acid could serve as carbon sources in mineral salts media. Experiments withPseudomonas sp. SG-1 (isolated from aerobic digester liquid) suggested that enzymatic activity responsible for glyphosate degradation was intracellular, inducible, and required the cofactors pyruvate and pyridoxal phosphate. The degradation pathway for glyphosate in this culture may be similar to that previously reported for aminoethylphosphonic acid.

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