화학공학소재연구정보센터
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.50, No.4, 440-446, 1998
Mineralization of low-chlorinated biphenyls by Burkholderia sp. strain LB400 and by a two membered consortium upon directed interspecies transfer of chlorocatechol pathway genes
The biphenyl-mineralizing bacterium Burkholderia in sp. strain LB400 also utilized 3-chloro-, 4-chloro-, 2,3'-dichloro- and 2,4'-dichlorobiphenyl for growth. By the attack of the initial enzyme a chlorine was eliminated dioxygenolytically from position 2 of one of the aromatic rings when hydrogens of both were substituted by chlorine. The strain mineralized 3-chloro-and 2,3'-dichlorobiphenyl via the central intermediate 3-chlorobenzoate through its chlorocatechol pathway enzymes, but excreted stoichiometric amounts of 4-chlorobenzoate from 4-chloro- and 2,4-dichlorobiphenyl. These two compounds were mineralized by a co-culture of strain LB400 and a derivative of the (methyl-) benzoate-degrading strain Pseudomonas putida mt-2 (TOL). The complete degradation was achieved upon transfer of a cluster of at least five genes, encoding the regulated chlorocatechol pathway operon, from strain LB400 to strain mt-2. This transfer was demonstrated by the polymerase chain reaction.