Biochar colloids act as both transporters of organic pollutants and stimulants of respiratory chain electron efflux: a new understanding of microbial degradation of adsorbed pollutants
Zhongmiao Wang, Jie Hou, Jiang Xu, Kun Yang, Daohui Lin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Microorganisms are pivotal in decomposing persistent organic pollutants in the environment. However, the bioavailability of pollutants is often hindered by the strong adsorption to ubiquitous fine colloids. This study provides the first evidence that Rhodococcus biphenylivorans, a known intracellular oxidative degradation bacterium, can reductively degrade organochlorine pollutants adsorbed on biochar colloids (BCCs) extracellularly, besides the oxidative degradation of BCCs-adsorbed pollutants intracellularly. Over a 30-day biodegradation period, the total biodegradation rates of adsorbed 2,4,4'-trichlorobiphenyl (PCB28, 10 mg/L) on BCCs (1 g/L) prepared at pyrolysis temperatures of 300, 500, and 700 ℃ were 59.4%, 34.8%, and 10.4%, respectively. The biodegradation products of adsorbed PCB28 on low-temperature BCCs were mainly chlorosubstituted-2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-hexadienoic acid-type products, while in the high-temperature BCCs system, dichlorobiphenyl was the main product. Mechanistically, BCCs with the low pyrolysis temperature could fragment during the degradation, facilitating the transport of adsorbed PCB28 into bacteria for the intracellular oxidative degradation; the interactions between bacterial cells and BCCs (especially of high pyrolysis temperature) could stimulate the respiratory chain electron efflux for the extracellular dechlorination degradation. These findings not only provide new insights into the modulatory influence of BCCs on microbial degradation of pollutants, but also enrich our knowledge on the environmental fate of colloids-adsorbed pollutants.
期刊介绍:
Environmental Science: Nano serves as a comprehensive and high-impact peer-reviewed source of information on the design and demonstration of engineered nanomaterials for environment-based applications. It also covers the interactions between engineered, natural, and incidental nanomaterials with biological and environmental systems. This scope includes, but is not limited to, the following topic areas:
Novel nanomaterial-based applications for water, air, soil, food, and energy sustainability
Nanomaterial interactions with biological systems and nanotoxicology
Environmental fate, reactivity, and transformations of nanoscale materials
Nanoscale processes in the environment
Sustainable nanotechnology including rational nanomaterial design, life cycle assessment, risk/benefit analysis