Enhanced degradation of perfluorooctanoic acid by a genome shuffling-modified Pseudomonas parafulva YAB-1
2018
AbstractPerfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) as an emerging persistent organic pollutant is hard to be degraded by conventional methods because of its stable physical and chemical properties. Microbial transformation is an attractive remediation approach to prevent and clean up PFOA contamination. To date, several strains of wild microbes have been reported to have limited capacity to degrade PFOA, Selection of superior strains degrading PFOA become urgently necessary. Here, we report the application of genome shuffling to improve the PFOA-degrading bacterium Pseudomonas Parafulva YAB-1. The initial mutant populations of strain YAB1 were generated by nitrosoguanidine and ultraviolet irradiation mutagenesis respectively, resulting in mutants YM-9 and YM-19 with slightly improved PFOA-degrading ability. YM-9 and YM-19 were used as the starting strains for three rounds of recursive protoplast fusion. The positive mutants were screened on inorganic salt medium plates containing different concentrations of PFOA and s...
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