Potential of Mercury-Resistant Marine Bacteria for Detoxification of Chemicals of Environmental Concern
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
The hypothesis that mercury-resistant bacteria exposed to polluted environments such as coastal areas can tolerate, detoxify, or biotransform a variety of other toxicants was examined. Several mercury-resistant marine bacteria from the coastal waters of India were evaluated for their ability to biotransform the heavy metals mercury, cadmium and lead as well as xenobiotics like polychlorinated biphenyls and tributyltin. These salt-tolerant bacteria removed mercury by means of volatilization and were successfully used to detoxify mercury-amended growth medium for the culturing of mercury-sensitive Phormidium sp. Over 70% cadmium and 95% of the lead from the growth medium were either cell-bound (cadmium) or precipitated (lead) by some of these bacteria. A pseudomonad strain, CH07, aerobically degraded fourteen toxic polychlorinated biphenyls including congeners with five or more chlorine atoms on the biphenyl ring and was also equally efficient in degrading more than 54% of the tributyltin. These bacteria offer great biotechnological opportunities in the bioremediation of toxic chemicals.
- 日本微生物生態学会の論文
著者
-
Fukami Kimio
Graduate School Of Kuroshio Science (grakus) Kochi University
-
De Jaysankar
National Institute Of Oceanography:graduate School Of Kuroshio Science (grakus) Kochi University
-
De Jaysankar
National Institute Of Oceanography
-
Ramaiah Nagappa
National Institute Of Oceanography
-
BHOSLE NARAYAN
National Institute of Oceanography
-
GARG ANITA
National Institute of Oceanography
-
VARDANYAN LILIT
Insitute of Hydroecology and Ichthyology
-
NAGLE VINOD
National Institute of Oceanography
-
Jaysankar De
National Institute of Oceanography:Graduate School of Kuroshio Science (GRAKUS), Kochi University
関連論文
- Occurrence of heavy metals in the sediments of Uranouchi Inlet, Kochi prefecture, Japan
- Isolation and killing activities of algicidal bacteria on a diatom Skeletonema sp. and a dinoflagellate Noctiluca scintillans in Thailand
- Potential of Mercury-Resistant Marine Bacteria for Detoxification of Chemicals of Environmental Concern
- Tolerance to Various Toxicants by Marine Bacteria Highly Resistant to Mercury
- Isolation and characterization of Noctiluca-killing bacteria from a shrimp aquaculture pond in Thailand
- Use of a Noctiluca-killing bacterium Marinobacter salsuginis strain BS2 to reduce shrimp mortality caused by Noctiluca scintillans