Specialized Microbes Clean Stubborn Chemicals From The Environment
Chlorinated chemicals perform a host of societally useful functions,
but they're not perfect. Once their use life has ended, they can become
environmental contaminants and even resistant to bioremediation.
In a series of new studies, Anca Delgado, a researcher at Arizona
State University's Biodesign Institute, examines unique groups of
microorganisms, capable of converting hazardous chlorinated chemicals
like trichloroetheene (TCE) into ethene, a benign end product of
microbial biodegradation. The new studies explore the metabolic
activities of a group of microbes known as Dehalococcoides, and propose strategies to improve their effectiveness for environmental cleanup projects involving chlorinated chemicals.
Trichloroethene – focus of the current studies – is one of the most
ubiquitous chlorinated chemicals. Approximately 60 percent of the U.S.
National Priorities List Superfund sites and roughly 20 percent of the
national groundwater sources are contaminated with chlorinated solvents,
such as TCE. TCE is a sweet-smelling, non-flammable liquid halocarbon
that was widely used in the past century because of its properties as an
effective industrial solvent, with applications ranging from dry
cleaning to the cleaning and degreasing of an enormous range of metal
and other components.
"Dehalococcoides have been officially on the scientific map
since 1997," Delgado says, noting that they remain the only
microorganisms of their kind, and therefore of great importance for
bioremediation. "In close to 20 years we have not discovered other
bacteria that can perform reductive dechlorination of chemicals like TCE
all the way to ethene."
TCE produces many undesirable health side effects. The most alarming hazard associated with TCE exposure is cancer. In 2011, the United States Environmental Protection Agency revised its Final Health Assessment for Trichloroethylene, formally identifying TCE as a human carcinogen.
TCE produces many undesirable health side effects. The most alarming hazard associated with TCE exposure is cancer. In 2011, the United States Environmental Protection Agency revised its Final Health Assessment for Trichloroethylene, formally identifying TCE as a human carcinogen.
Improper disposal of TCE (and related chlorinated chemicals) is a
major threat to human health and water sources due to the volume of
these chemicals that have found their way into the environment, the
resulting carcinogenic hazard and the significant challenges involved in
cleanup.
Enter Dehalococcoides mccartyi, a group of anaerobic
bacteria whose unique metabolic processes allow them to grow and thrive,
using TCE as part of their respiratory machinery.
"They use these chlorinated solvents as their electron acceptor,
which means they respire them," Krajmalnik-Brown says. "It's like their
oxygen." (Just what Dehalococcoides was living on before the introduction of TCE remains an unresolved puzzle.)
Dehalococcoides have become an invaluable tool for the
bioremediation of sites contaminated with TCE because they can convert
the hazardous chemical first into cis-dichlroethene (cis-DCE), then to
vinyl chloride, intermediary chlorinated byproducts, and finally into
ethene, an environmentally benign, non-chlorinated end-product. As
Krajmalnik-Brown notes "to date, every time we see a site where ethene
is being produced, Dehalococcoides are present."
There's one problem, however. In some cases, Dehalococcoides
fail to complete the transformation of TCE into ethene, stalling at the
mid-stage reaction and sequentially producing two chemicals: cis-DCE
and vinyl chloride. The latter is a human carcinogen and of grave
concern in the environment, as it can disperse more readily than the
original TCE.
The primary focus of the PLOS ONE study was to determine the nature of this stalling during the TCE-to-ethene reaction. Earlier studies had proposed that Dehalococcoides
at a given bioremediation site lacked the necessary machinery required
to complete the full breakdown of TCE into ethene. An alternate
explanation suggested that Dehalococcoides was somehow inhibited during the process.
Delgado's work points to another explanation and a plausible means for rectifying the stalling problem. Dehalococcoides require hydrogen (H2) as an electron donor for their respiratory cycle. The current experiments proved that in some cases, Dehalococcoides are out-competed for hydrogen by a variety of other microorganisms present in the soil or sediment.
Samples of soil and sediment from three sites (Romania, Puerto Rico
and South Carolina) were examined. The first two samples were
uncontaminated while the third was extracted from a military base in
Parris Island, South Carolina – a site contaminated with PCE, a
chlorinated chemical similar to TCE.
All three samples were used in microcosm studies where general
environmental conditions of a given site are replicated in a sample
bottle and remediation effects can be acutely analyzed. The studies
demonstrated that sites bearing wide microbial diversity (such as the
uncontaminated Romanian and Puerto Rican samples) contained large
numbers of bacteria capable of out-competing Dehalococcoides for essential hydrogen, thereby causing the breakdown of chlorinated chemicals to stall at the cis-DCE phase.
In the case of the contaminated sample from South Carolina, Dehalococcoides
was successful in the full reduction of chlorinated chemical to ethene.
The authors speculate that the toxic contaminant in the sediment likely
acted to limit microbial diversity, allowing Dehalococcoides better access to hydrogen.
In the Romanian and Puerto Rican soil samples, conditions for Dehalococcoides
to thrive were created by removing the soil with the competing microbes
and their respective electron acceptors (presumably present in the
solid phase). Thus, the mid-stage stalling was overcome and the reaction
from TCE to ethene was successful. The same outcome was also obtained
by enriching microcosms with additional Dehalococcoides from a mixed microbial culture.
A further discovery of the new research is that carbonate minerals
naturally present in water and soil act as electron acceptors for
competing microbes like methanogens and acetogens, helping them grow and
outcompete Dehalococcoides for hydrogen. This was also
systematically demonstrated in Delgado's previous study. Limiting the
addition of carbonates (commonly used to raise the aquifer pH) in
contaminated sites should also enhance the ability of Dehalococcoides to fully reduce TCE to ethene.
Delgado and her colleagues used the knowledge gathered in these two
studies to grow biodegrading cultures in continuous bioreactor
experiments, demonstrating that Dehalococcoides could be grown
at high density and perform reductive dechlorination at faster rates
under conditions where bicarbonate was finely adjusted to optimum
values, depriving competitors (paper). Currently, Delgado and
Krajmalnik-Brown are contacting bioremediation companies to test these
optimized Dehalococcoides-containing cultures at contaminated sites.
"One of the implications of this study that we consider important is
understanding your contaminated site – linking the chemistry and
microbiology from the very beginning is very important," Delgado says.
The stakes for human health are enormous, as effective cleanup of
innumerable sites around the world contaminated with chlorinated
chemicals remains a daunting societal challenge.
Results of the most recent of three studies appear in PLOS ONE.
Source: Arizona State University
Source: Arizona State University
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