Methanogenic degradation of crude oil in subsurface sediments occurs slowly, but without the need for exogenous electron acceptors, is sustained for long periods and has enormous economic and environmental consequences. Here we show that volatile hydrocarbons are inhibitory to methanogenic oil biodegradation by comparing degradation of an artificially weathered crude oil with volatile hydrocarbons removed, with the same oil that was not weathered. Volatile hydrocarbons (nC5-nC10, methylcyclohexane, benzene, toluene, and xylenes) were quantified in the headspace of microcosms.
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December 2006
The biosynthesis of the chlorinated amino acid [R-(Z)]-4-amino-3-chloro-2-pentenedioic acid (ACPA) was investigated. Feeding studies with Streptomyces viridogenes were conducted in resting cells. Substantial incorporation from [(15)N]- and [(13)C]-enriched glutamate and proline indicated that the biosynthetic origin of ACPA is one of these amino acids.
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