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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular detection and diversity of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria isolated from geographically diverse sites.

TLDR
Determination of the ability of the isolates to use PAH and its presumed catabolic intermediates suggests that the isolate showed multiple phenotypes in terms of utilization and degradation pathways, suggesting that PAH-degrading bacteria are diverse.
Abstract
Nineteen polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-degrading bacteria were isolated from environmental samples in Kuwait, Indonesia, Thailand, and Japan by enrichment with either naphthalene or phenanthrene as a sole carbon source. Sequence analyses of the 16-S rRNA gene indicated that at least seven genera (Ralstonia, Sphingomonas, Burkholderia, Pseudomonas, Comamonas, Flavobacterium, and Bacillus) were present in this collection. Determination of the ability of the isolates to use PAH and its presumed catabolic intermediates suggests that the isolates showed multiple phenotypes in terms of utilization and degradation pathways. The large subunit of the terminal oxygenase gene (phnAc) from Burkholderia sp. strain RP007 hybridized to 32% (6/19) of the isolates, whilst gene probing using the large subunit of terminal oxygenase gene (pahAc) from Pseudomonas putida strain OUS82 revealed no pahAc-like genes amongst the isolates. Using three degenerated primer sets (pPAH-F/NR700, AJ025/26, and RieskeF/R), targeting a conserved region with the genes encoding the large subunit of terminal oxygenase successfully amplified material from 6 additional PAH-degrading isolates. Sequence analyses showed that the large subunit of terminal oxygenase in 4 isolates was highly homologous to the large subunit of naphthalene dioxygenase gene from Ralstonia sp. strain U2. However, we could not obtain any information on the oxygenase system involved in the naphthalene and/or phenathrene degradation by 7 other strains. These results suggest that PAH-degrading bacteria are diverse, and that there are still many unidentified PAH-degrading bacteria.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Recent Advances in Petroleum Microbiology

TL;DR: The physiological responses of microorganisms to the presence of hydrocarbons, including cell surface alterations and adaptive mechanisms for uptake and efflux of these substrates, have been characterized and used to investigate the dynamics of microbial communities in petroleum-impacted ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: environmental pollution and bioremediation

TL;DR: The problems of PAH pollution and PAH degradation, and relevant bioremediation efforts are discussed and chemotaxis could also have an important role in enhancing biodegradation of pollutants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Current State of Knowledge in Microbial Degradation of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs): A Review

TL;DR: A review of current knowledge of bacteria, halophilic archaea, fungi and algae mediated degradation/transformation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons can be found in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetics of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Metabolism in Diverse Aerobic Bacteria

TL;DR: This review is an outline of genetic knowledge about bacterial PAH catabolism from both Gram-negative bacteria other than Pseudomonas species and Gram-positive bacteria, and the information about these genes is expanding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Real-Time PCR quantification of PAH-ring hydroxylating dioxygenase (PAH-RHDα) genes from Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria in soil and sediment samples

TL;DR: Deduced from highly sensitive Real-Time PCR quantification, the ratio of PAH-RHDalpha gene relative to the 16S rRNA gene copy number showed that thePAH-bacterial degraders could represent up to 1% of the total bacterial community in the PAh-contaminated sites.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice

TL;DR: The sensitivity of the commonly used progressive multiple sequence alignment method has been greatly improved and modifications are incorporated into a new program, CLUSTAL W, which is freely available.
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Use of repetitive (repetitive extragenic palindromic and enterobacterial repetitive intergeneric consensus) sequences and the polymerase chain reaction to fingerprint the genomes of Rhizobium meliloti isolates and other soil bacteria.

TL;DR: Isolates which had been postulated to beclosely related bymultilocus enzyme electrophoresis alsorevealed similar REP andERICPCR patterns, suggesting that theREP andERicPCR sequences are closely related.
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Plasposons : Modular self-cloning minitransposon derivatives for rapid genetic analysis of gram-negative bacterial genomes

TL;DR: A series of modular mini-transposon derivatives which permit the rapid cloning and mapping of the DNA flanking the minitransposon’s site of insertion have been developed, resulting in a versatile tool for the mapping of insertional mutations and the rapid recovery of clones from gram-negative bacteria.
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Enumeration and characterization of the soil microflora from hydrocarbon-contaminated soil sites able to mineralize polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH)

TL;DR: The ubiquitous presence of a potent and versatile mineralizingmicroflora in PAH-contaminated soils indicated that the microflora is not the limiting factor for the degradation of PAH with up to four rings.
Journal ArticleDOI

The phn genes of Burkholderia sp. strain RP007 constitute a divergent gene cluster for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon catabolism.

TL;DR: A divergent set of PAH catabolic genes, the phn genes, which although isofunctional to the classical nah-like genes, show very low homology, are reported, which suggests that phnS is a LysR-type transcriptional activator and phnR is a member of the sigma54-dependent family of positive transcriptional regulators.
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