Publications by authors named "Bhavik A Shah"

The perpetual release of natural/synthetic pollutants into the environment poses major risks to ecological balance and human health. Amongst these, contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) are characterized by their recent introduction/detection in various niches, thereby causing significant hazards and necessitating their removal. Pharmaceuticals, plasticizers, cyanotoxins and emerging pesticides are major groups of CECs that are highly toxic and found to occur in various compartments of the biosphere.

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Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Zwf) is an important enzyme in glucose metabolism via the Entner-Doudoroff pathway and the first enzyme in the oxidative pentose-phosphate pathway. It generates NAD(P)H during the conversion of glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) to 6-phosphogluconolactone, thus aiding in anabolic processes, energy yield, and oxidative stress responses. Pseudomonas bharatica CSV86 preferentially utilized aromatic compounds over glucose and exhibited a significantly lower growth rate on glucose (0.

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Pseudomonas sp. CSV86, an Indian soil isolate, degrades wide range of aromatic compounds like naphthalene, benzoate and phenylpropanoids, amongst others. Isolate displays the unique and novel property of preferential utilization of aromatics over glucose and co-metabolizes them with organic acids.

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As a result of anthropogenic activity, large number of recalcitrant aromatic compounds have been released into the environment. Consequently, microbial communities have adapted and evolved to utilize these compounds as sole carbon source, under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. The constitutive expression of enzymes necessary for metabolism imposes a heavy energy load on the microbe which is overcome by arrangement of degradative genes as operons which are induced by specific inducers.

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Article Synopsis
  • Increased human activities have caused microbes in the biosphere to adapt and evolve in response to environmental changes, particularly due to the presence of persistent xenobiotics.
  • These xenobiotic compounds can be harmful, acting as endocrine disruptors, mutagens, or carcinogens, making their removal from the environment crucial.
  • Microbial communities have developed diverse biochemical pathways for the degradation of these compounds, with genetic material exchanged through mobile elements, demonstrating rapid evolution of new degradation capabilities, exemplified by the breakdown of naphthalene and Carbaryl.
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