Abstract

Abstract Four bacteria, which could grow on pyrene as the sole source of carbon, were isolated from soil from an urban area in Tokyo. One of them, strain H2-5, was a rod bacterium that was positive in gram staining and in acid-fast staining. The optimum growth temperature was 34-35°C, and the upper limit temperature for the growth was around 45°C. At a concentration of 1.3 μg/ml polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), H2-5 cells (45 μg dry weight/ml) grown on Tryptic Soy Broth made disappear 90% of pyrene in 12 hr, and Benzo(a)pyrene (BaP), Benz(a)-anthracene (BaA), and Benzo(ghi)perylene individually disappeared 60%, 25%, and 8%, respectively, in 3 days. PAHs in the extract by dichloromethane from airborne particles in approximately 5 m3 of air disappeared by the action of H2-5 as follows: pyrene, 100% in 3 days; BaA and BaP, 70% and 71%, respectively, in 4 days. Pyrene in tarry matter extracted from soil disappeared 88% in 4 days.

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