Abstract
Bioremediation is a promising treatment technology for 1,4-dioxane-contaminated groundwater. However, metabolic dioxane-degrading bacteria identified to date are limited by their slow kinetics and inability to sustain growth at low dioxane concentrations (<100 μg/L). Furthermore, strains may underperform because of missing growth factors, such as amino acids or vitamins. In this work, we reevaluate Rhodococcus ruber strain 219 as a dioxane-degrading strain with bioaugmentation potential. We report rapid growth and metabolic dioxane degradation by R. ruber 219 when supplemented with thiamine (vitamin B1). We also discern that the strain lacks a complete de novo thiamine synthesis pathway, indicating that R. ruber 219 is a probable thiamine auxotroph. However, when supplemented with thiamine, the strain’s Monod kinetics (Ks = 0.015 ± 0.03 μg/L) and exceedingly low Smin (0.49 ± 1.16 μg/L) suggest this strain can maintain growth at very low dioxane concentrations (<100 μg/L). Accordingly, we demonstrate that thiamine-grown R. ruber 219 sustains degradation of dilute dioxane (<100 μg/L) to below health advisory levels. This is the first study to report sustained metabolic dioxane biodegradation to below health advisory levels of 0.35 μg/L. Overall, our findings solidify R. ruber 219 as a promising candidate for bioremediation of dioxane-contaminated groundwater.
Highlights
Bioremediation is a promising treatment technology for 1,4-dioxane-contaminated groundwater
We report rapid growth and metabolic dioxane degradation by R. ruber 219 in minimal media supplemented with thiamine
Neither growth nor dioxane removal was observed in cultures without vitamins, or in cultures amended with vitamins but lacking thiamine after 7 days (Figure 1) and 34 days (Figure S1)
Summary
1,4-Dioxane (dioxane) is a probable human carcinogen and prevalent groundwater pollutant.[1,2] Because of its high mobility in water, dioxane plumes are often large and dilute (
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