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1.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; : e0073224, 2024 May 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38819127

RESUMO

Chloroform (CF) and dichloromethane (DCM) are groundwater contaminants of concern due to their high toxicity and inhibition of important biogeochemical processes such as methanogenesis. Anaerobic biotransformation of CF and DCM has been well documented but typically independently of one another. CF is the electron acceptor for certain organohalide-respiring bacteria that use reductive dehalogenases (RDases) to dechlorinate CF to DCM. In contrast, known DCM degraders use DCM as their electron donor, which is oxidized using a series of methyltransferases and associated proteins encoded by the mec cassette to facilitate the entry of DCM to the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. The SC05 culture is an enrichment culture sold commercially for bioaugmentation, which transforms CF via DCM to CO2. This culture has the unique ability to dechlorinate CF to DCM using electron equivalents provided by the oxidation of DCM to CO2. Here, we use metagenomic and metaproteomic analyses to identify the functional genes involved in each of these transformations. Though 91 metagenome-assembled genomes were assembled, the genes for an RDase-named acdA-and a complete mec cassette were found to be encoded on a single contig belonging to Dehalobacter. AcdA and critical Mec proteins were also highly expressed by the culture. Heterologously expressed AcdA dechlorinated CF and other chloroalkanes but had 100-fold lower activity on DCM. Overall, the high expression of Mec proteins and the activity of AcdA suggest a Dehalobacter capable of dechlorination of CF to DCM and subsequent mineralization of DCM using the mec cassette. IMPORTANCE: Chloroform (CF) and dichloromethane (DCM) are regulated groundwater contaminants. A cost-effective approach to remove these pollutants from contaminated groundwater is to employ microbes that transform CF and DCM as part of their metabolism, thus depleting the contamination as the microbes continue to grow. In this work, we investigate bioaugmentation culture SC05, a mixed microbial consortium that effectively and simultaneously degrades both CF and DCM coupled to the growth of Dehalobacter. We identified the functional genes responsible for the transformation of CF and DCM in SC05. These genetic biomarkers provide a means to monitor the remediation process in the field.

2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 57(48): 19912-19920, 2023 Dec 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37962431

RESUMO

Chloroform (CF) and dichloromethane (DCM) contaminate groundwater sites around the world but can be cleaned up through bioremediation. Although several strains of Dehalobacter restrictus can reduce CF to DCM and multiple Peptococcaceae can ferment DCM, these processes cannot typically happen simultaneously due to CF sensitivity in the known DCM-degraders or electron donor competition. Here, we present a mixed microbial culture that can simultaneously metabolize CF and DCM and create an additional enrichment culture fed only DCM. Through genus-specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction, we find that Dehalobacter grows while either CF alone or DCM alone is converted, indicating its involvement in both metabolic steps. Additionally, the culture was maintained for over 1400 days without the addition of an exogenous electron donor, and through electron balance calculations, we show that DCM metabolism would produce sufficient reducing equivalents (likely hydrogen) for CF respiration. Together, these results suggest intraspecies electron transfer could occur to continually reduce CF in the culture. Minimizing the addition of electron donor reduces the cost of bioremediation, and "self-feeding" could prolong bioremediation activity long after donor addition ends. Overall, understanding this mechanism informs strategies for culture maintenance and scale-up and benefits contaminated sites where the culture is employed for remediation worldwide.


Assuntos
Clorofórmio , Cloreto de Metileno , Clorofórmio/metabolismo , Cloreto de Metileno/metabolismo , Biodegradação Ambiental , Halogenação , Peptococcaceae/metabolismo
3.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 98(8)2022 08 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35700008

RESUMO

Reductive dehalogenases (RDases) are corrinoid-dependent enzymes that reductively dehalogenate organohalides in respiratory processes. By comparing isotope effects in biotically catalyzed reactions to reference experiments with abiotic corrinoid catalysts, compound-specific isotope analysis (CSIA) has been shown to yield valuable insights into enzyme mechanisms and kinetics, including RDases. Here, we report isotopic fractionation (ε) during biotransformation of chloroform (CF) for carbon (εC = -1.52 ± 0.34‰) and chlorine (εCl = -1.84 ± 0.19‰), corresponding to a ΛC/Cl value of 1.13 ± 0.35. These results are highly suppressed compared to isotope effects observed both during CF biotransformation by another organism with a highly similar RDase (>95% sequence identity) at the amino acid level, and to those observed during abiotic dehalogenation of CF. Amino acid differences occur at four locations within the two different RDases' active sites, and this study examines whether these differences potentially affect the observed εC, εCl, and ΛC/Cl. Structural protein models approximating the locations of the residues elucidate possible controls on reaction mechanisms and/or substrate binding efficiency. These four locations are not conserved among other chloroalkane reducing RDases with high amino acid similarity (>90%), suggesting that these locations may be important in determining isotope fractionation within this homologous group of RDases.


Assuntos
Carbono , Corrinoides , Aminoácidos , Biodegradação Ambiental , Isótopos de Carbono , Domínio Catalítico , Cloro/química
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