1. Petroleum-Tolerant Rhizospheric Bacteria: Isolation, Characterization and Bioremediation Potential.
- Author
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Viesser JA, Sugai-Guerios MH, Malucelli LC, Pincerati MR, Karp SG, and Maranho LT
- Subjects
- DNA, Bacterial isolation & purification, Petroleum Pollution, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Rhodococcus equi genetics, Rhodococcus equi isolation & purification, Biodegradation, Environmental, Panicum microbiology, Petroleum metabolism, Rhizosphere, Rhodococcus equi metabolism
- Abstract
Petroleum is an important energy source. Due to its intensive exploration, accidents resulting in oil spills on soil are frequent, which creates consequences to ecosystems and human health. Rhizodegradation is an efficient technique that promotes the decontamination of polluted environments through the selection and use of rhizosphere microorganisms from phytoremediation plants. The aim of this study was to isolate, identify and characterize bacteria capable of degrading petroleum from the rhizosphere of Panicum aquaticum Poir., a plant that grows in petroleum contaminated soils. Three bacteria were isolated and characterized at the morphological (Gram staining), molecular (16S rRNA gene sequence analysis) and biochemical level. These bacteria were identified as new strains of Bacillus thurigiensis, Bacillus pumilus and Rhodococcus hoagii, which have been reported as potential bioremediators in the literature. All three bacteria were able to use petroleum hydrocarbons as the sole carbon source during in vitro degradation assays. Gas chromatography analysis of these assays indicated reductions of petroleum hydrocarbons between 23% and 96% within 48 h. Among the isolated bacteria, Rhodococcus hoagii presented the highest efficiency of petroleum consumption, reaching 87% of degradation after only 24 h of cultivation, which corresponds to a higher and faster degradation than previously reported, confirming the potential use of Rhodococcus hoagii for petroleum biodegradation.
- Published
- 2020
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