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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jun 1997, 2136-2141, Vol 63, No. 6
A Hess, B Zarda, D Hahn, A Haner, D Stax, P Hohener and J Zeyer
A diesel fuel-contaminated aquifer was bioremediated in situ by the
injection of oxidants (O2 and NO3-) and nutrients in order to stimulate
microbial activity. After 3.5 years of remediation, an aquifer sample was
excavated and the material was used (i) to isolate bacterial strains able
to grow on selected hydrocarbons under denitrifying conditions and (ii) to
construct a laboratory aquifer column in order to simulate the aerobic and
denitrifying remediation processes. Five bacterial strains isolated from
the aquifer sample were able to grow on toluene (strains T2 to T4, T6, and
T10), and nine bacterial strains grew on toluene and m-xylene (strains M3
to M7 and M9 to M12). Strains T2 to T4, T6, and T10 were cocci, and strains
M3 to M7 and M9 to M12 were rods. The morphological and physiological
differences were also reflected in small sequence variabilities in domain
III of the 23S rRNA and in the 16S rRNA. Comparative sequence analyses of
the 16S rRNA of one isolate (T3 and M3) of each group revealed a close
phylogenetic relationship for both groups of isolates to organisms of the
genus Azoarcus. Two 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotide probes (Azo644 and
Azo1251) targeting the experimental isolates, bacteria of the Azoarcus
tolulyticus group, and Azoarcus evansii were used to investigate the
significance of hydrocarbon-degrading Azoarcus spp. in the laboratory
aquifer column. The number of bacteria in the column determined after DAPI
(4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining was 5.8 x 10(8) to 1.1 x 10(9)
cells g of aquifer material-1. About 1% (in the anaerobic zone of the
column) to 2% (in the aerobic zone of the column) of these bacteria were
detectable by using a combination of probes Azo644 and Azo1251,
demonstrating that hydrocarbon-degrading Azoarcus spp. are significant
members of the indigenous microbiota. More than 90% of the total number of
bacteria were detectable by using probes targeting higher phylogenetic
groups. Approximately 80% of these bacteria belonged to the beta
subdivision of the class Proteobacteria (beta-Proteobacteria), and 10 to
16% belonged to the gamma-Proteobacteria. Bacteria of the
alpha-Proteobacteria were present in high numbers (10%) only in the aerobic
zone of the column.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
In situ analysis of denitrifying toluene- and m-xylene-degrading bacteria in a diesel fuel-contaminated laboratory aquifer column
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Schlieren, Switzerland. hess@ito.umnw.ethz.ch
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