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Degradation of phenanthrene and naphthalene by a Burkholderia species strain

Authors
Kang, H.Hwang, S.Y.Kim, Y.M.Kim, E.Kim, Y.S.Kim, Seong-KiKim, S.W.Cerniglia, C.E.Shuttleworth, K.L.Zylstra, G.J.
Issue Date
Feb-2003
Publisher
NATL RESEARCH COUNCIL CANADA
Keywords
Burkholderia; phenanthrene; naphthalene; phthalate; protocatechuate
Citation
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, v.49, no.2, pp 139 - 144
Pages
6
Journal Title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume
49
Number
2
Start Page
139
End Page
144
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/25029
DOI
10.1139/W03-009
ISSN
0008-4166
1480-3275
Abstract
Burkholderia sp. TNFYE-5 was isolated from soil for the ability to grow on phenanthrene as sole carbon and energy source. Unlike most other phenanthrene-degrading bacteria, TNFYE-5 was unable to grow on naphthalene. Growth substrate range experiments coupled with the ring-cleavage enzyme assay data suggest that TNFYE-5 initially metabolizes phenanthrene to 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate with subsequent degradation through the phthalate and protocatechuate and beta-ketoadipate pathway. A metabolite in the degradation of naphthalene by TNFYE-5 was isolated by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and was identified as salicylate by UV-visible spectral and gas chromatography - mass spectrometry analyses. Thus, the inability to degrade salicylate is apparently one major reason for the incapability of TNFYE-5 to grow on naphthalene.
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Kim, Seong-Ki
자연과학대학 (생명과학과)
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