An alpha -Proteobacterium Converts Linear Alkylbenzenesulfonate Surfactants into Sulfophenylcarboxylates and Linear Alkyldiphenyletherdisulfonate Surfactants into Sulfodiphenylethercarboxylates

dc.contributor.authorSchleheck, David
dc.contributor.authorDong, Wenbodeu
dc.contributor.authorDenger, Karin
dc.contributor.authorHeinzle, Elmardeu
dc.contributor.authorCook, Alasdair M.
dc.date.accessioned2011-03-24T17:44:15Zdeu
dc.date.available2011-03-24T17:44:15Zdeu
dc.date.issued2000deu
dc.description.abstractThe surfactant linear alkylbenzenesulfonate (LAS; 0.5 mM) or linear monoalkyldiphenyletherdisulfonate (LADPEDS; 0.5 mM) in salts medium was easily degraded in laboratory trickling filters, whereas carbon-limited, aerobic enrichment cultures in suspended culture with the same inocula did not grow. We took portions of the trickling filters which degraded LADPEDS, shook the organisms from the solid support (polyester), and found that growth in suspended culture in LADPEDS-salts medium occurred only in the presence of some solid support (polyester fleece or glass wool), though little biomass was immobilized on the support. The end products in suspended culture were identical with those from the trickling filters. There was low plating efficiency of LADPEDS-grown cultures on complex medium, and no picked colony or mixture of colonies grew in LADPEDS-salts-glass wool medium. However, selective plates containing LADPEDS-salts medium solidified with agarose yielded LADPEDS-dependent, pinpoint colonies which could be picked singly and subcultured in selective liquid medium. Isolate DS-1 was a bacterium which showed 93% sequence homology (16S ribosomal DNA) to its nearest phylogenetic neighbor, an alpha -proteobacterium. Strain DS-1 grew heterotrophically in LADPEDS-salts-glass wool medium and converted the set of aryl-substituted alkanes to the corresponding aryl-substituted carboxylic acids of shorter chain length. Similarly, strain DS-1 grew heterotrophically with commercial LAS, converting it to a set of sulfophenylcarboxylates. Growth with a single isomer of LAS [3-(4-sulfophenyl)dodecane] was concomitant with excretion of 4-(4-sulfophenyl)hexanoate, which was identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry. The growth yield (6.4 g of protein/mol of C) indicated mass balance, which, with the specific growth rate (0.05 h-1), indicated a specific utilization rate of LAS of 2.2 mkat/kg of protein.eng
dc.description.versionpublished
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfdeu
dc.identifier.citationFirst publ. in: Applied and Environmental Microbiology 66 (2000), 5, pp. 1911-1916deu
dc.identifier.ppn29324491Xdeu
dc.identifier.urihttp://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/8508
dc.language.isoengdeu
dc.legacy.dateIssued2008deu
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
dc.subject.ddc570deu
dc.titleAn alpha -Proteobacterium Converts Linear Alkylbenzenesulfonate Surfactants into Sulfophenylcarboxylates and Linear Alkyldiphenyletherdisulfonate Surfactants into Sulfodiphenylethercarboxylateseng
dc.typeJOURNAL_ARTICLEdeu
dspace.entity.typePublication
kops.citation.bibtex
@article{Schleheck2000alpha-8508,
  year={2000},
  title={An alpha -Proteobacterium Converts Linear Alkylbenzenesulfonate Surfactants into Sulfophenylcarboxylates and Linear Alkyldiphenyletherdisulfonate Surfactants into Sulfodiphenylethercarboxylates},
  number={5},
  volume={66},
  journal={Applied and Environmental Microbiology},
  pages={1911--1916},
  author={Schleheck, David and Dong, Wenbo and Denger, Karin and Heinzle, Elmar and Cook, Alasdair M.}
}
kops.citation.iso690SCHLEHECK, David, Wenbo DONG, Karin DENGER, Elmar HEINZLE, Alasdair M. COOK, 2000. An alpha -Proteobacterium Converts Linear Alkylbenzenesulfonate Surfactants into Sulfophenylcarboxylates and Linear Alkyldiphenyletherdisulfonate Surfactants into Sulfodiphenylethercarboxylates. In: Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 2000, 66(5), pp. 1911-1916deu
kops.citation.iso690SCHLEHECK, David, Wenbo DONG, Karin DENGER, Elmar HEINZLE, Alasdair M. COOK, 2000. An alpha -Proteobacterium Converts Linear Alkylbenzenesulfonate Surfactants into Sulfophenylcarboxylates and Linear Alkyldiphenyletherdisulfonate Surfactants into Sulfodiphenylethercarboxylates. In: Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 2000, 66(5), pp. 1911-1916eng
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