Microbial degradation of chloroethenes: a review.

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int

Institute for Nanomaterials, Advanced Technologies and Innovation, Technical University of Liberec, Studentská 2, 461 17, Liberec, Czech Republic.

Published: May 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chloroethenes contamination is harmful to the environment and human health, leading to increased remediation efforts and research into microbial degradation methods.
  • Microbial degradation occurs through various processes, including anaerobic respiration and co-metabolic degradation, where bacteria use chloroethenes alongside other nutrients.
  • Recent studies focus on optimizing these natural degradation processes by examining the diversity of bacteria involved and identifying key genes and enzymes linked to dehalogenation, thereby enhancing bioremediation strategies.

Article Abstract

Contamination by chloroethenes has a severe negative effect on both the environment and human health. This has prompted intensive remediation activity in recent years, along with research into the efficacy of natural microbial communities for degrading toxic chloroethenes into less harmful compounds. Microbial degradation of chloroethenes can take place either through anaerobic organohalide respiration, where chloroethenes serve as electron acceptors; anaerobic and aerobic metabolic degradation, where chloroethenes are used as electron donors; or anaerobic and aerobic co-metabolic degradation, with chloroethene degradation occurring as a by-product during microbial metabolism of other growth substrates, without energy or carbon benefit. Recent research has focused on optimising these natural processes to serve as effective bioremediation technologies, with particular emphasis on (a) the diversity and role of bacterial groups involved in dechlorination microbial processes, and (b) detection of bacterial enzymes and genes connected with dehalogenation activity. In this review, we summarise the different mechanisms of chloroethene bacterial degradation suitable for bioremediation and provide a list of dechlorinating bacteria. We also provide an up-to-date summary of primers available for detecting functional genes in anaerobic and aerobic bacteria degrading chloroethenes metabolically or co-metabolically.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-017-8867-yDOI Listing

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