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Decolorization, degradation and detoxification of mutagenic dye Methyl orange by novel biofilm producing plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria.

Authors :
Haque, Md. Manjurul
Hossen, Md. Nayeem
Rahman, Ashikur
Roy, Joty
Talukder, Md. Raihan
Ahmed, Minhaz
Ahiduzzaman, Md.
Haque, Md. Amdadul
Source :
Chemosphere. Jan2024, Vol. 346, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Discharge of untreated dyeing wastewater nearby water-bodies is one of major causes of water pollution. Generally, bacterial strains isolated from industrial effluents and/or contaminated soils are used for the bioremediation of Methyl orange (MO), a mutagenic recalcitrant mono-azo dye, used in textiles and biomedical. However, MO degradation by biofilm producing plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (BPPGPR) was not studied yet. In this study, 19 out of 21 BPPGPR strains decolorized 96.3–99.9% and 89.5–96.3% MO under microaerophilic and aerobic conditions, respectively from Luria-Bertani broth (LBB) followed by yeast-extract peptone and salt-optimized broth plus glycerol media within 120 h of incubation at 28 °C. Only selected BPPGPR including Pseudomonas fluorescens ESR7, P. veronii ESR13, Stenotrophomonas maltophilia ESR20, Staphylococcus saprophyticus ESD8, and P. parafulva ESB18 were examined for process optimization of MO decolorization using a single factor optimization method. This study showed that under optimal conditions (e.g., LBB, 100 mg L−1 MO, pH 7, incubation of 96 h, 28 °C), these strains could remove 99.1–99.8% and 97.6–99.5% MO under microaerophilic and aerobic conditions, respectively. Total azoreductase and laccase activities responsible for biodegradation were also remarkably activated in the biodegraded samples under optimal conditions, while these activities were repressed under unfavorable conditions (e.g., 40 °C and 7.5% NaCl). This study confirmed that MO was degraded and detoxified by these bacterial strains through breakage of azo bond. So far, this is the first report on bioremediation of MO by the BPPGPR strains. These BPPGPR strains are highly promising to be utilized for the bioremediation of dyeing wastewater in future. [Display omitted] • 19 biofilm forming PGPR strains effectively decolorized MO from Luria Bertani broth. • Examined strains decolorized 99.1–99.8% in ideal and microaerophilic conditions. • Studied PGPR strains removed 92.8–99.7% MO in optimum and aerobic conditions. • MO degradation confirmed by analytical, enzymatic and TOC studies. • Degraded metabolites are less toxic than parent dye. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
346
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173757807
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.140568