Crude Oil Degradation by a Novel Strain Pseudomonas aeruginosa AQNU-1 Isolated from an Oil-Contaminated Lake Wetland
Haijun Liu; Guo Yang; Hui Jia; Bingjie Sun
In this study, a novel crude oil degrading bacterium was isolated from an oil-contaminated freshwater lake using crude oil as the sole carbon source. The strain was named Pseudomonas aeruginosa AQNU-1 based on the analyses of its morphological characteristics and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) was carried out to investigate the degradation of crude oil fractions under dynamic (37 °:C, 180 r/min) and static (37 °:C, 0 r/min) cultivation over three months of continuous enrichment in the laboratory. It was found that strain AQNU-1 exhibited stronger biodegradation efficiency for n-alkanes of C13&ndash:C35 under dynamic cultivation with degradation ratios of 87&ndash:100% compared to ratios of 74&ndash:100% under static cultivation. Furthermore, this strain could fully utilize alkylcyclohexane (M/Z 82), alkylbenzene (M/Z 92) and alkyltoluene (M/Z 106) in crude oil under both conditions. It also had better biodegradability of partial aromatic compounds in the crude oil, showing differences within compound families of aromatic hydrocarbons. Further, the potential degradation ability of this isolated strain decreased with increasing molecular weight, with the dynamic condition performing better in general. These results suggest that the isolated strain has great potential to assimilate indigestible crude-oil contaminants under different hydrological conditions, providing a valuable microbiological resource for in situ remediation of natural wetlands.
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