2 resultados para Bacteria, Anaerobic.

em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are chemicals produced by both human activities and natural sources and they have been present in the biosphere since millions of years. For this reason microorganisms should have developed, during the world history, the capacity of metabolized them under different electron acceptors and redox conditions. The deep understanding of these natural attenuation processes and of microbial degradation pathways has a main importance in the cleanup of contaminated areas. Anaerobic degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons is often presumed to be slow and of a minor ecological significance compared with the aerobic processes; however anaerobic bioremediation may play a key role in the transformation of organic pollutants when oxygen demand exceeds supply in natural environments. Under such conditions, anoxic and anaerobic degradation mediated by denitrifying or sulphate-reducing bacteria can become a key pathway for the contaminated lands clean up. Actually not much is known about anaerobic bioremediation processes. Anaerobic biodegrading techniques may be really interesting for the future, because they give the possibility of treating contaminated soil directly in their natural status, decreasing the costs concerning the oxygen supply, which usually are the highest ones, and about soil excavations and transports in appropriate sites for a further disposal. The aim of this dissertation work is to characterize the conditions favouring the anaerobic degradation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Special focus will be given to the assessment of the various AEA efficiency, the characterization of degradation performance and rates under different redox conditions as well as toxicity monitoring. A comparison with aerobic and anaerobic degradation concerning the same contaminated material is also made to estimate the different biodegradation times.

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The ability of a previously PCB-enriched microbial culture from Venice Lagoon marine sediments to dechlorinate pentachlorophenol (PCP) and 2,3,5-trichlorophenol (2,3,5-TCP) was confirmed under anaerobic conditions in microcosms consisting of site water and sediment. Dechlorination activities against Aroclor 1254 PCB mixture were also confirmed as control. Pentachlorophenol was degraded to 2,4,6-TCP (75.92±0.85 mol%), 3,5-DCP (6.40±0.75 mol%), and phenol (15.40±0.87 mol%). From the distribution of the different dechlorination products accumulated in the PCP-spiked cultures over time, two dechlorination pathways for PCP were proposed: (i) PCP to 2,3,4,6-TeCP, then to 2,4,6-TCP through the removal of both meta double-flanked chlorine substituents (main pathway); (ii) alternately, PCP to 2,3,5,6-TeCP, 2,3,5-TCP, 3,5-DCP, then phenol, through the removal of the para double-flanked chlorine, followed by ortho single-flanked chlorines, and finally meta unflanked chlorines (minor pathway). Removal of meta double-flanked chlorines is thus preferred over all other substituents. 2,3,5-TCP, that completely lacks double-flanked chlorines, was degraded to 3,5-DCP through removal of the ortho single-flanked chlorine, with a 99.6% reduction in initial concentration of 2,3,5-TCP by week 14. 16S rRNA PCR-DGGE using Chloroflexi-specific primers revealed a different role of the two microorganisms VLD-1 and VLD-2, previously identified as dechlorinators in the Aroclor 1254 PCB-enriched community, in the dehalogenation of chlorophenols. VLD-1 was observed both in PCP- and TCP-dechlorinating communities, whereas VLD-2 only in TCP-dechlorinating communities. This indicates that VLD-1 and VLD-2 may both dechlorinate ortho single-flanked chlorines, but only VLD-1 is able to remove double-flanked meta or para chlorines.