Removal of BPA by Pseudomonas asiatica P1: Synergistic response mechanism of toxicity resistance and biodegradation

Bisphenol A (BPA) is a globally concerning toxic pollutant, and microbial degradation is considered an effective method to treat BPA contamination. However, the inherent microbial toxicity of BPA is often overlooked, particularly the microbial mechanisms of resistance and detoxification against BPA....

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecotoxicology and environmental safety 2024-12, Vol.288, p.117410, Article 117410
Hauptverfasser: Tian, Kejian, Gu, Jinming, Wang, Yibing, Zhang, Fenglin, Zhou, Dandan, Qiu, Qing, Yu, Yue, Sun, Xuejian, Chang, Menghan, Zhang, Xinwen, Huo, Hongliang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Bisphenol A (BPA) is a globally concerning toxic pollutant, and microbial degradation is considered an effective method to treat BPA contamination. However, the inherent microbial toxicity of BPA is often overlooked, particularly the microbial mechanisms of resistance and detoxification against BPA. This study found that under the toxic stress of BPA, cbb3-type cytochrome c oxidase (cbb3-Cox) in the cells of Pseudomonas asiatica P1 (P. asiatica P1) was the first to resist the toxicity. Genes such as ccoNOQPG showed significant upregulation with an average log2FC value of 3.56. Subsequently, genes that are related to metal ion binding, transport, and DNA repair were upregulated in the middle to later phase, which enhanced the metabolic functions of the strains and induced strain mutations to assist P. asiatica P1 in resisting the BPA toxicity. Meanwhile, three potential BPA degradation genes were identified, among which sdrP1 was crucial to the BPA degradation and detoxification. After genetic recombination, sdrP1 achieved a degradation rate of 92.52 % for BPA. Furthermore, through various methods such as alkyl interactions, sdrP1 exhibited oxidation and demethylation to form lower toxic intermediate products and complete the biological detoxification of BPA. This study provides a systematic analysis of the toxicity resistance, biodegradation, and detoxification processes in bacterial BPA removal, refines the mechanism of BPA biodegradation and contributes to a more comprehensive and systematic understanding of the overall process of microbial removal of toxic pollutants. [Display omitted] •sdrP1 is a newly discovered and crucial gene for BPA degradation.•The catalytic active site TYR-147 is crucial for the action of SDRP1 on BPA methyl.•cbb3-Cox is directly responsible for resisting BPA toxicity.•Genes related to metal ion binding and DNA repair assist in detoxification.•Genes of the detoxification system are expressed prior to the degradation system.
ISSN:0147-6513
1090-2414
1090-2414
DOI:10.1016/j.ecoenv.2024.117410