Title: Biodegradation of Xenobiotic Compounds Xenobiotics
1Biodegradation of Xenobiotic Compounds
- Xenobiotics compound have been produced
artificially by chemical synthesis for industrial
or agricultural purposes e.g. halogenated H.C.,
aromatics, pesticides, PCB, PAH, lignin, humic
substances - Recalcitrant compound totally resistant to
biodegradation e.g. unusual substitute (Cl- or
2H-), unusual bond sequences (3? 4?), highly
condensed aromatic rings, and excessive molecular
size (polyethylene)
- Co-metabolism an organic compound is converted
to metabolic products but does not serve as a
source of energy or nutrients to
microorganismsEx. insecticides, aliphatic
aromatic H.C.
3Source of xenobiotic compounds 1. Petrochemical
industry oil/gas industry, refineries, and
the production of basic chemicals e.g. vinyl
chloride and benzene 2. Plastic industry -
closely related to the petrochemical industry -
uses a number of complex organic compounds
such as anti-oxidants, plasticizers,
cross-linking agents
43. Pesticide industry most commonly found
central structures are benzene and benzene
derivatives, often chlorinated and often
heterocyclic 4. Paint industry major ingredient
are solvents, xylene, toluene, methyl ethyl
ketone, methyl isobutyl ketone and
preservatives 5. Others Electronic industry,
Textile industry, Pulp and Paper industry,
Cosmetics and Pharmaceutical industry, Wood
preservation
5Why compounds are recalcitrant?
- Failure of the compound to induce the synthesis
of degrading enzyme. - Failure of the compound to enter the m.o. cell
for lack of suitable permease. - Unavailability of the compound due to
insolubility or adsorption.
64. Excessive toxicity of the parent compound
or its metabolic products.5. Unavailability of
the proper electron acceptor.6. Unfavorable
environmental factors e.g. temp., light,
pH, O2 , moisture.7. Unavailability of the other
nutrients (N, P) and growth factors.
7Factors effect the xenobiotic biodegradation by
m.o.
1. Substrate specificity such as for the type of
aromatic cpd., for the ring position (o-,
m-, or p- ), and for the atom or group
removed. Specificities could reside at the
level of enzymes, organisms, or broad
physiological groups 2. Electron acceptors
oxygen, nitrate, and sulfate most often
inhibit dehalogenation by anaerobic
communities
83. Other nutrients addition of various
nutrients as electron donors, C-source,
N-source, P-source, or micronutrients can
stimulate the reaction or support the growth
of the microorganisms 4. Temperature affected
both the acclimation period and the rate of
biodegradation activity 5. Substrate availability
the hydrophobicity of many xenobiotic cpd.
affects their biodegradation through its
effect on their availability to microorganisms
9Biodegradation of Petroleum compounds
- Petroleum compounds are categorized into 2 groups
- Aliphatic hydrocarbon e.g. alkane, alcohol,
aldehyde - Aromatic hydrocarbon e.g. benzene, phenol,
toluene, catechol - H.C. (substrate) O2 H.C.-OH H2O
- H.C. (substrate) O2 H.C.
monooxygenase
OH
dioxygenase
OH
10Straight chain aliphatic H.C. compounds
11Cyclic aliphatic H.C. compounds
12Aerobic degradation of aromatic compounds
13- are metabolized by a variety of bacteria, with
ring fission - accomplished by mono- and dioxygenases
- - catechol and protocatechuate are the
intermediates - mostly found in aromatic cpd. degradation
pathway
14Some m.o. involved in the biodegradation of
xenobiotics Organic Pollutants Organis
ms Phenolic - Achromobacter,
Alcaligenes, compound Acinetobacter,
Arthrobacter, Azotobacter,
Flavobacterium, Pseudomonas putida -
Candida tropicalis Trichosporon
cutaneoum - Aspergillus, Penicillium
Benzoate related Arthrobacter, Bacillus
spp., compound Micrococcus, P.
putida
15 Organic Pollutants Organisms Hydrocar
bon E. coli, P. putida, P. Aeruginosa,
Candida Surfactants Alcaligenes,
Achromobacter, Bacillus, Flavobacterium, P
seudomonas, Candida Pesticides P.
Aeruginosa DDT B. sphaericus
Linurin 2,4-D Arthrobacter, P. cepacia
P. cepacia 2,4,5-T
Parathion Pseudomonas spp., E. coli, P.
aeruginosa
16Genetic Regulation of Xenobiotic Degradation
plasmid-borne mostly in the genus
Pseudomonas PLASMID
SUBSTRATE TOL Toluene, m-xylene,
p-xylene CAM Camphor OCT Octane, hexane,
decane NAH Napthalene pJP1 2,4-Dichlorophe
noxy acetic acid pAC25 3-Chlorobenzoate SAL
Salicylate
17Anaerobic degradation
1) Photometabolism in bacteria this
light-induced bound oxygen (OH) was used
to oxidized substrates
182) under nitrate-reducing condition
Nitrate-reducing bacteria couple the oxidation of
org. cpd. with water to the exergonic reduction
of nitrate via nitrite to N2
OH
OH
O
COOH
3H2
H2O
Metabolic pool
CH3
H2
3) dissimilation through sulfate respiration
Sulfate- reducing bacteria couple the
oxidation of org. cpd. with water to the
exergonic reduction of sulfate via sulfite to
sulfide
194) The anaerobic fermentation of many
polyphenolic substances m.o. derive their
energy from substrate-level phosphorylation while
org. cpd. serve as e-donors and acceptors.
OH
O
O
O
H2O
NADPH
OH
C HOOC CH2 HOOC CHOH
CH2
Intermediary metabolism
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
OH
5) Methanogenic fermentation
OH
3H2
H
OH
OH
O
H2
OH
OH
H2O
OH
H2
H
20Mechanisms of Dehalogenation
1) reductive dehalogenation two-electron
transfer reaction which involves the release of
the halogen as a halogenide ion and its
replacement by hydrogen
2) oxygenolytic dehalogenation catalyzed by
mono- or dioxygenases, which incorporate atom
of molecular oxygen into the substrate
213) hydrolytic dehalogenation catalyzed by
halido- hydrolases, the halogen is replaced
by a OH group which is derived from water.
4) thiolytic dehalogenation in
dichloromethane-utilizing bacteria, a
dehalogenating glutathione S-transferase
catalyzes the formation of a S-chloromethyl
glutathione conjugate, with a concomitant
declorination taking place.
225) intramolecular substitution involved in the
dehalogenation of vicinal haloalcohols
236) dehydrodehalogenation HX is eliminated from
the molecule, leading to the formation of a
double bond
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
HCl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
Cl
7) hydratation a hydratase-catalyzed addition
of water molecule to an unsaturated bond can
yield dehalogenation of vinylic compounds
24Chlorophenols
Metabolism of monochlorophenols by Pseudomonas
sp. B13
25Proposed degradation pathway for
2,4,5-trichlorophenol in P. cepacia
Proposed degradation pathway for
pentachlorophenol in Flavobacterium sp. and
coryneform-like strain KC-3
26Organism 1
Organism 2
reductive
decarboxylation
reductive
dechlorination
dechlorination
phenol
2,4-dichlorophenol
4-chlorophenol
4-hydroxybenzoate
carboxylation
in p -position
Organism 3
ring fission
Organism 4
methanogenesis
Organism 5 6
Sequential degradation of 2,4-dichlorophenol
under anaerobic (methanogenic) conditions in a
lake sediment
27Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAHs)
28Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAHs)
- bacteria, fungi, yeasts, and
- algae have the ability to
- metabolize both lower and
- higher M.W. PAHs found in
- the natural environment
- most bacteria have been
- found to oxygenate the PAH
- initially to form dihydrodiol
- with a cis-configuration,
- which can be further oxidized
- to catechols
29- most fungi oxidize
- PAHs via a cytochrome
- P450 catalyzed mono-
- oxygenase reaction to
- form reactive arene
- oxides that can
- isomerize to phenols
30- White-rot fungi
- oxidize PAHs via
- ligninases (lignin
- peroxidases and
- laccase) to form
- highly reactive
- quinones
- little is known
- about the potential
- of PAHs for
- anaerobic
- metabolism
31 ???????? 1 ????????????? PAHs
????????????????????????????????
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34BTEX
- benzene degrading bacteria
- e.g. P. putida 39 /D, Moraxella
- spp. , Arthrobacter spp.and
- Aerobacter aerogenes
- toluene degrading bacteria
- e.g. P. aeruginosa , P. putida
- Pseudomonas spp.,
- Achromobacter spp. and
- Nocardia corallina
Biodegradation of benzene (Experiments with
Pseudomonas putida by Gibson and his colleagues
showed two routes to catechol from benzene)
35Biodegradation of toluene
Anaerobic pathway
Aerobic pathway
36p-Xylene
The metabolic enzymes in this pathway have been
shown to have similar specificty for toluene,
para-xylene, and meta-xylene
37Biodegradation of ethyl benzene
- Under aerobic conditions
- ethylbenzene degradation involves
- oxygenase reactions that can
- proceed in either of two primary
- pathways
- A Pseudomonas sp. (strain NCIB
- 10643) has been shown to utilize a
- wide range of n-alkylbenzenes
- (C2-C7), of which ethylbenzene is
- a single example.
38Bacterial co-metabolism of halogenated organic
compounds
- TCE (trichloroethylene), widely used industrial
solvent, - is unreactive halocarbon compound
- Anaerobic bacteria can reductively dehalogenate
- TCE to form vinylchloride (strongly
carcinogenic) - no one has succeeded in obtaining a
TCE-degrading - bacteria able to use TCE as sole carbon and
energy - source, that driven the studies on the
co-metabolism - of TCE
39- An oxygenase
- monooxygenase might yield TCE- epoxide
- dioxygenase yield 1,2 dihydroxy TCE
- e.g. Toluene dioxygenase from
- Pseudomonas putida F1
- Methane monooxygenase (MMO) from
- Methanotrophs (Methylococcus, Methylosinus)
40Theoretical pathways of TCE oxidation by
monooxygenases and dioxygenases
41TCE oxidation by soluble methane monooxygenase
(MMO) oxidizes methane to methanol in the first
step of C1 oxidative metabolism by methanotrophs
42Oxygenases and organisms implicated in TCE
oxidation
43Conclusion
MMO
- TCE 1. TCE - epoxide (major
product) - 2. Chloral (minor product)
Toluene dioxygenase
- TCE 1. D - formate (major product)
- 2. Glyoxylate (minor product)
44e.g. heme, vitamin B12, coenzyme F430
45Bacterial transition-metal coenzyme
Vitamine B12
Coenzyme F430
46Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
Cln
Cln
General structure (there are 210 theoretically
possible PCB molecules)
Microorganism-specific nature of PCB degradation
(Unterman et al., 1988)
47Major steps in the conversion of PCBs into
chlorobenzoates (Sylvestre and Sandossi,1994)
Proposed metabolic pathway of 2,20,5-trichlorobiph
enyl via 2,3 attack (Komancova et al., 2003)
48Anaerobic degradation
- reductive dechlorination of Arochlor PCBs by
Hudson River sediment - each peak in the gas
chromatographic tracing represents a specific
PCB congener
49Potential pathway for anaerobic dechlorination of
a highly chlorinated congener (Fish and Principe,
1994)
- Both anaerobic and aerobic metabolism modes
transform PCBs. - Different microorganisms show preferential
attack on PCBs - resulting in different patterns of degradation.
- The degree of chlorination of the congener is a
major factor, - which influences degradation potential of the
compound.
50Pesticides
- in about 1868 a chemical compound used as a
- commercial pesticide was Paris green Copper
acetate - meta-arsenate, Cu(CH3COO)2 3Cu(AsO2)2
- DDT (dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane) is the
first - of a number of chlorinated H.C. to be developed
as - pesticides in 1939
- Pesticides can be classified in a number of
different - ways for example by their chemical nature (
natural - organic cpd., inorganic cpd., chlorinated
hydrocarbon, - organophosphates, carbamates, and others)
51Proposed pathways for the microbial degradation
of DDT
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53Proposed pathways for the microbial degradation
of Carbaryl (carbamates) e.g. Pseudomonas
spp., Rhodococcus sp., Bacillus sp.,
Micrococcus sp.
54Proposed pathways for the microbial degradation
of parathions (organophosphates) e.g.
Pseudomonas sp., Flavobacterium sp., Bacillus
strains., Arthrobacter strains
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56Lindane (gamma-hexachlorocyclohexane, g-HCH)
Microorganisms
Sphingomonas paucimobilis UT 26
Anabeana sp. PCC7120
Nostoc ellipsosporum
Enzymes
g-HCH dehydrochlorinase (Lin A)
1,4-TCDN halidohydrolase (Lin B)
2,5-DDOL dehydrogenase (Lin C)
2,5-DCHQ reductive dehalogenase (Lin D)
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58Summary of Biodegradation of PesticidesÂ
There are many mechanisms involved on the
biodegradation of pesticides and other
contaminants. These may be summarised as follows
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60The assay systems for biodegradability test
- Measurement of oxygen consumption by manometric
and electrolytic system - Measurement of CO2 evolution by infrared or
- chemical methods
- 3. Use of radio-labeled substrates
- 4. Measurement of the disappearance of the
chemicals - by GC
- 5. Determination of the reduction of DOC
- 6. Chemical biodegradability under anaerobic
conditions - (measuring gas production, CH4 CO2)