Use of γ-hexachlorocyclohexane as a terminal electron acceptor by an anaerobic enrichment culture.

J Hazard Mater

Hazardous Substance Research Center/South and Southwest, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.

Published: December 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study successfully demonstrated the use of γ-hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) as a terminal electron acceptor in organohalide respiration through the development of an enrichment culture from contaminated soil and groundwater.
  • The enrichment culture utilized hydrogen as an electron donor, achieving 79-90% reduction of γ-HCH, resulting in benzene and chlorobenzene as the main transformation products in a sustained manner for over a year.
  • The research identified a Gram-positive organism responsible for γ-HCH dechlorination, while notable acetogenesis and methanogenesis were also observed in bicarbonate-buffered medium, indicating complex microbial interactions.

Article Abstract

The use of γ-hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) as a terminal electron acceptor via organohalide respiration was demonstrated for the first time with an enrichment culture grown in a sulfate-free HEPES-buffered anaerobic mineral salts medium. The enrichment culture was initially developed with soil and groundwater from an industrial site contaminated with HCH isomers, chlorinated benzenes, and chlorinated ethenes. When hydrogen served as the electron donor, 79-90% of the electron equivalents from hydrogen were used by the enrichment culture for reductive dechlorination of the γ-HCH, which was provided at a saturation concentration of approximately 10 mg/L. Benzene and chlorobenzene were the only volatile transformation products detected, accounting for 25% and 75% of the γ-HCH consumed (on a molar basis), respectively. The enrichment culture remained active with only hydrogen as the electron donor and γ-HCH as the electron acceptor through several transfers to fresh mineral salts medium for more than one year. Addition of vancomycin to the culture significantly slowed the rate of γ-HCH dechlorination, suggesting that a Gram-positive organism is responsible for the reduction of γ-HCH. Analysis of the γ-HCH dechlorinating enrichment culture did not detect any known chlororespiring genera, including Dehalobacter. In bicarbonate-buffered medium, reductive dechlorination of γ-HCH was accompanied by significant levels of acetogenesis as well as methanogenesis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2011.09.080DOI Listing

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