Content area

Abstract

Biodegradation of endosulfan (α and β) and pendimethalin by Bacillus safensis strain FO-36bT, Bacillus subtilis subsp. inaquosorum strain KCTC 13429T and Bacillus cereus strain ATCC14579T isolated from pesticides-polluted soil was studied in mineral salt medium. Endosulfan and pendimethalin were incubated with the three bacterial strains with samples drawn at various intervals for GC analysis. Representative samples were subject to GC–MS analysis. The loss in the initial concentrations, 0.663 mM (α endosulfan), 0.319 mM (β endosulfan) and 1.423 mM (pendimethalin), was monitored and used to compute the half-lives following biphasic model. Removal percentage of endosulfan and pendimethalin in the media inoculated with the bacterial strains ranged from 24 to 95% (α endosulfan), 21–91% (β endosulfan) and 51–97% (pendimethalin), respectively. Despite the significant decrease in starting material in B. safensis cultures, no metabolites were detected, whereas two major metabolites of endosulfan, 1,2,3,4,7,7-hexachloro-5,6-dihydroxybicyclo{2.2.1}-2-heptene and 1,2,3,4,7,7-hexachloro-formaldehyde-6-methylbicyclo{2.2.1}-2-heptene, were detected in the B. subtilis cultures, and one metabolite of pendimethalin metabolite; N-(1-ethylpropyl)-3-methyl-2, 6-diaminobenzine, was detected in the B. cereus culture. Generally, the result indicates the potential capability of these microorganisms in complete mineralization of endosulfan and pendimethalin. Based on half-lives, the efficiency of bacterial strains can be ordered as follows: B. subtilis > B. cereus > B. safensis for endosulfan and B. cereus > B. safensis > B. subtilis for pendimethalin.

Details

Title
Biodegradation of endosulfan and pendimethalin by three strains of bacteria isolated from pesticides-polluted soils in the Sudan
Author
Ishag Abd Elaziz Sulieman Ahmed 1 ; Abdelbagi Azhari Omer 1 ; Hammad Ahmed Mohammed Ali 1 ; Elsheikh Elsiddig Ahmed Elmustafa 2 ; Elsaid, Osama Elgilani 3 ; Jang-Hyun, Hur 4 

 University of Khartoum, Department of Crop Protection, Faculty of Agriculture, Shambat, Sudan (GRID:grid.9763.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 0674 6207) 
 University of Khartoum, Department of Soil and Environment, Faculty of Agriculture, Shambat, Sudan (GRID:grid.9763.b) (ISNI:0000 0001 0674 6207) 
 Al Neelain University, Faculty of Agricultural Technology and Fish Sciences, Khartoum, Sudan (GRID:grid.440839.2) 
 Kangwon National University, Department of Biological Environment, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Chuncheon, Republic of Korea (GRID:grid.412010.6) (ISNI:0000 0001 0707 9039) 
Pages
287-297
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Jun 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
24680834
e-ISSN
24680842
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2399162677
Copyright
© The Korean Society for Applied Biological Chemistry 2017.