Inside the Black Box
by Brett Baldwin Ph.D.
Greg` Davis
Dora Ogles
August 1, 2008
Microbiology and bioremediation of chlorinated solvents.
During the last 10 to 15 years, the use of nucleic
acid-based methods (DNA and RNA), most notably quantitative polymerase chain
reaction (qPCR), has grown substantially in the environmental restoration
industry.
Since the DNA is extracted directly from the
groundwater, soil or sediment sample, qPCR assays targeting degrader bacteria
avoid the biases associated with cultivation-based approaches to provide a more
direct, accurate and sensitive method to quantify specific microorganisms or
biological processes. While providing the most direct avenue to evaluate
biodegradation potential, translating qPCR results such as 3.5 x 104
Dehalococcoides cells/mL into contaminant biodegradation is less readily
apparent than with chemical or geochemical results.
Dehalococcoides spp.
Dehalococcoides spp. are hydrogen-consuming, obligate
halorespiring bacteria, which have received much attention due to their ability
to utilize chlorinated ethenes as electron acceptors. Chlorinated ethenes
including tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichloroethene (TCE) were widely used as
dry cleaning fluids and industrial solvents, and are now prominent groundwater
contaminants. Under anaerobic conditions, PCE and TCE can undergo sequential reductive
dechlorination through the daughter products cis-dichloroethene (cis-DCE) and
vinyl chloride (VC) to ethene. While a number of bacterial cultures including
dehalococcoides, dehalobacter, desulfitobacterium, and desulfuromonas species
capable of utilizing PCE and TCE as growth supporting electron acceptors have
been isolated Dehalococcoides spp. may be the most important because they are
the only bacterial group that has been isolated to date which is capable of
complete reductive dechlorination of PCE to ethane. In fact, the presence of
Dehalococcoides spp. has been associated with the full dechlorination to ethene
at sites across North America and Europe. Thus, qPCR monitoring of the
abundance of Dehalococcoides spp. allows site managers to evaluate the
feasibility of complete reductive dechlorination under MNA conditions and the
effectiveness of biostimulation (electron donor addition) to promote growth of
key reductive dechlorinating bacteria and enhance bioremediation.
The accumulation of the daughter products cis-DCE and VC
termed "DCE stall" is relatively common at PCE/TCE sites, especially
under monitored natural attenuation (MNA) conditions. DCE stall is particularly
problematic because VC is generally considered more carcinogenic than the
parent compounds. Within the Dehalococcoides genus, the range of chlorinated
ethenes metabolized and cometabolized varies by species and strain. For
example, Dehalococcoides ethenogenes str. 195 metabolizes PCE, TCE, and cis-DCE
and cometabolizes VC to produce ethene. Conversely, Dehalococcoides sp. CBDB1
utilizes PCE and TCE but does not cometabolize additional chloroethenes.
Therefore, additional qPCR assays targeting vinyl chloride reductase genes
(bvcA and vcrA) were developed to more definitively confirm the potential for
biodegradation of VC.
Although most research has focused on
chlorinated ethenes, some Dehalococcoides species are also capable of reductive
dechlorination of chlorinated aromatic hydrocarbons. Again, biodegradation of
individual compounds and isomers varies by isolate, however, qPCR enumeration
of Dehalococcoides may also provide valuable insight into the feasibility of
bioremediation of chlorobenzenes, chlorophenols and polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs). For example, dehalococcoides sp. CBDB1 has shown broad metabolic
activity utilizing pentachlorophenol (PCP), tetrachlorophenols,
trichlorophenols, hexachlorobenzene, pentachlorobenzene and tetrachlorobenzenes
as growth supporting electron acceptors. Dehalococcoides have also been
detected in PCB-impacted sediment and transformation of numerous PCBs
containing five or more chlorine substituents has been demonstrated.
Dehalobacter spp.
Dehalobacter is another genus of anaerobic bacteria capable
of reductive dechlorination of chlorinated compounds including PCE and TCE.
Unlike most Dehalococcoides isolates that have been characterized, Dehalobacter
pure cultures studied to date can utilize PCE and TCE but cannot metabolize or
cometabolize the daughter products cis-DCE and VC. While the range of
chlorinated ethenes utilized appears relatively limited, members of the genus
Dehalobacter have the somewhat unique ability to utilize chlorinated ethanes
including 1,1,1-trichloroethane (1,1,1-TCA) and 1,1,2-trichloroethane (1,1,2-TCA).
TCAs were extensively used in industrial applications as degreasers and are
therefore common co-contaminants at PCE/TCE-impacted sites. The presence of
1,1,1-TCA is especially problematic at PCE-impacted sites due to inhibition of
reductive dechlorination of chlorinated ethenes particularly VC. Under aerobic
conditions, TCA can be co-oxidized by methane-, ammonia-, and butane-oxidizing
bacteria. Due to the presence of chlorinated ethanes as co-contaminants at PCE
sites and the fact that impacted groundwater is often anoxic or anaerobic,
anaerobic mechanisms for biodegradation of chlorinated ethanes are particularly
pertinent.
The range of chlorinated ethanes biodegraded by
Dehalobacter varies by species and strain. Dehalobacter restrictus strain TCA1
converts 1,1,1-TCA to chloroethane with the transient accumulation of
1,1-dichlorethane as an intermediate. 1,1,2-TCA did not serve as a
growth-supporting electron acceptor for strain TCA1, however, Grostern and
Edwards attributed the dichloroelimination of 1,1,2-TCA to vinyl chloride to a
Dehalobacter species. The Grostern and Edwards study is particularly
interesting because it was performed with mixed culture (Dehalococcoides sp.
KB-1 and Dehalobacter sp. MS), chlorinated ethenes (TCE and daughter products),
and 1,1,1-TCA. In cultures containing both organisms, degradation of cis-DCE
and VC to ethene by Dehalococcoides proceeded only after dechlorination of
1,1,1-TCA by Dehalobacter thus demonstrating important roles for both genera at
PCE/TCE sites co-contaminated by TCA.
Desulfitobacterium spp.
As
with Dehalobacter spp., some members of the Desulfitobacterium genus can
utilize PCE, TCE and 1,1,2-TCA as growth-supporting electron acceptors. In
addition, some Desulfitobacterium spp. have demonstrated relatively broad
specificity and may play an important role in the biodegradation of chlorinated
aromatic hydrocarbons. For example, many species within the Desulfitobacterium
genus are capable of ortho dechlorination of chlorinated phenols including EPA
priority pollutants pentachlorophenol (PCP) and 2,4,6-trichlorophenol. One
particular isolate, D. frappieri PCP-1, is also capable of meta and para
dechlorination of some tri- and di-chlorophenols. Additionally, when induced by
the presence of chlorophenols, strain PCP-1 can cometabolize a broad range of
chlorinated aromatics including pentachloroanilines and
pentrachloronitrobenzene.
Methanotrophs and aerobic cometabolism of chlorinated ethenes
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| Groundwater sampling with Bio-Flo filter |
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Under aerobic conditions, several different types of bacteria
including methane-oxidizing bacteria (methanotrophs), ammonia-oxidizing
bacteria, and some toluene/phenol-utilizing bacteria can cometabolize TCE, DCE
and VC. In general, cometabolism of chlorinated ethenes is mediated by
monooxygenase enzymes with relaxed specificity that oxidize a primary
(growth-supporting) substrate and co-oxidize the chlorinated compound. Although
a variety of primary substrates can foster production of different
monooxygenases capable of cometabolic oxidation, methane is frequently the most
readily available primary substrate.
Most methanotrophs are only capable of producing particulate
methane monooxygenase (pMMO), which is capable of aerobic cometabolism but
often at lower rates. Other methanotrophs are capable of producing both pMMO
and soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) enzymes which in general are believed
to capable of greater rates of aerobic cometabolism. qPCR assays targeting
total methanotrophs and the sMMO gene were developed to aid in the evaluation
of aerobic cometabolism as a treatment mechanism.
Summary
Bioremediation, by definition, is dependent upon the
activity of subsurface microorganisms. However, site microbiology is often
viewed as a "black box" where contaminants enter and daughter
products form. Advances in molecular biology such as qPCR offer an
unprecedented opportunity to peer into the black box to more directly evaluate
bioremediation.
If 1,1,1-TCA is present as a co-contaminant,
enumeration of dehalobacter could aid in determining whether TCA would be
degraded or persist, potentially inhibiting cis-DCE and VC biodegradation.
Similar scenarios could be envisioned for other contaminants, but the overlying
premise remains the same: The judicious selection of qPCR assays and careful interpretation
the results in light of chemical and geochemical data provides a more complete
understanding of in-situ bioremediation that will aid in science-based site
management decisions. PE
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