Department of Microbiology, University of Port-Harcourt, P.M.B. 5323, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria.
Waste Manag Res. 2012 Mar;30(3):225-36. doi: 10.1177/0734242X11410114. Epub 2011 Aug 8.
Bacterial population dynamics were examined during bioremediation of an African soil contaminated with Arabian light crude oil and nutrient enrichment (biostimulation). Polymerase chain reaction followed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) were used to generate bacterial community fingerprints of the different treatments employing the 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) gene as molecular marker. The DGGE patterns of the nutrient-amended soils indicated the presence of distinguishable bands corresponding to the oil-contaminated-nutrient-enriched soils, which were not present in the oil-contaminated and pristine control soils. Further characterization of the dominant DGGE bands after excision, reamplification and sequencing revealed that Corynebacterium spp., Dietzia spp., Rhodococcus erythropolis sp., Nocardioides sp., Low G+C (guanine plus cytosine) Gram positive bacterial clones and several uncultured bacterial clones were the dominant bacterial groups after biostimulation. Prominent Corynebacterium sp. IC10 sequence was detected across all nutrient-amended soils but not in oil-contaminated control soil. Total heterotrophic and hydrocarbon utilizing bacterial counts increased significantly in the nutrient-amended soils 2 weeks post contamination whereas oil-contaminated and pristine control soils remained fairly stable throughout the experimental period. Gas chromatographic analysis of residual hydrocarbons in biostimulated soils showed marked attenuation of contaminants starting from the second to the sixth week after contamination whereas no significant reduction in hydrocarbon peaks were seen in the oil-contaminated control soil throughout the 6-week experimental period. Results obtained indicated that nutrient amendment of oil-contaminated soil selected and enriched the bacterial communities mainly of the Actinobacteria phylogenetic group capable of surviving in toxic contamination with concomitant biodegradation of the hydrocarbons. The present study therefore demonstrated that the soil investigated harbours hydrocarbon-degrading bacterial populations which can be biostimulated to achieve effective bioremediation of oil-contaminated soil.
生物修复过程中非洲土壤中阿拉伯轻质原油和营养物富集(生物刺激)的细菌种群动态研究。聚合酶链反应(PCR)结合变性梯度凝胶电泳(DGGE),使用 16S 核糖体核糖核酸(rRNA)基因作为分子标记,生成不同处理的细菌群落指纹图谱。添加营养物的土壤的 DGGE 图谱表明,存在与受污染的富营养化土壤相对应的可区分带,而在受污染的和原始对照土壤中不存在这些带。对切胶、再扩增和测序后的优势 DGGE 条带进行进一步分析,发现经过生物刺激后,优势 DGGE 条带主要为 Corynebacterium spp.、Dietzia spp.、Rhodococcus erythropolis sp.、Nocardioides sp.、低 G+C(鸟嘌呤加胞嘧啶)革兰氏阳性菌克隆体和一些未培养的细菌克隆体。在所有添加营养物的土壤中都检测到突出的 Corynebacterium sp. IC10 序列,但在受污染的对照土壤中未检测到。添加营养物的土壤中总异养菌和烃类利用菌数量在污染后 2 周显著增加,而受污染的和原始对照土壤在整个实验期间基本保持稳定。生物刺激土壤中残留烃类的气相色谱分析表明,污染物从污染后的第二周至第六周开始明显衰减,而在整个 6 周实验期间,受污染的对照土壤中烃类峰值没有明显减少。结果表明,受污染土壤的营养物添加选择并富集了主要为放线菌分类群的细菌群落,这些细菌能够在毒性污染中存活并伴随烃类的生物降解。因此,本研究表明,所研究的土壤中含有能够被生物刺激的烃类降解细菌种群,可用于受污染土壤的有效生物修复。