Catabolic Gene Probe Analysis of an Aquifer Microbial Community Degrading Creosote-Related Polycyclic Aromatic and Heterocyclic Compounds
1997
The biodegradation of a mixture of several creosote-related compounds, p-cresol, phenanthrene, fluorene, and carbazole was examined in columns containing aquifer sands. The aquifer material, itself, had an effect on the migration of the test compounds, with p-cresol being retarded the least, followed by carbazole, then fluorene, and finally phenanthrene. The biodegradation of all the compounds was greatly enhanced by the inclusion of p-cresol (10 ppm) in the substrate mixture. Associated with this enhanced degradation was a 100-fold increase in the total culturable bacterial population, and increases in the xylE- and ndoB-positive bacterial populations of more than three orders of magnitude. The products of these two genes are involved in the degradation of monocyclic and polycyclic aromatic compounds, respectively. In columns that did not receive p-cresol, there was no significant change in either the total culturable bacterial population density or the xylE-positive bacterial population, but there were significant increases of one to two orders of magnitude in the ndoB-positive bacterial populations. The results suggest that the ndoB gene probe can detect bacteria capable of utilizing phenanthrene, carbazole, and possibly fluorene.
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