Use of fluorinated compounds to detect aromatic metabolites from m-cresol in a methanogenic consortium: evidence for a demethylation reaction

Anaerobic sewage sludge was used to enrich a methanogenic m-cresol-degrading consortium. 6-Fluoro-3- methylphenol was synthesized and added to subcultures of the consortium with m-cresol. This caused the accumulation of 4-hydroxy-2-methylbenzoic acid. In a separate experiment, the addition of 3-fluo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and Environmental Microbiology 1993-07, Vol.59 (7), p.2229-2238
Hauptverfasser: Londry, K.L, Fedorak, P.M
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Anaerobic sewage sludge was used to enrich a methanogenic m-cresol-degrading consortium. 6-Fluoro-3- methylphenol was synthesized and added to subcultures of the consortium with m-cresol. This caused the accumulation of 4-hydroxy-2-methylbenzoic acid. In a separate experiment, the addition of 3-fluorobenzoic acid caused the transient accumulation of 4-hydroxybenzoic acid. Inhibition with bromoethanesulfonic acid caused the accumulation of benzoic acid. Thus, the proposed degradation pathway was m-cresol leads to 4-hydroxy-2-methylbenzoic acid leads to 4-hydroxybenzoic acid leads to benzoic acid. The m-cresol-degrading consortium was able to convert exogenous 4-hydroxybenzoic acid and benzoic acid to methane. In addition, for each metabolite of m-cresol identified, the corresponding fluorinated metabolite was detected, giving the following sequence: 6-fluoro-3-methylphenol leads to 5-fluoro-4-hydroxy-2-methylbenzoic acid leads to 3-fluoro-4-hydroxybenzoic acid leads to 3-fluorobenzoic acid. The second step in each of these pathways is a novel demethylation which was rate limiting. This demethylation reaction would likely facilitate the transformation of the methyl group to methane, which is consistent with the results of a previous study that showed that the methyl carbon of m-[methyl-14C] cresol was recovered predominantly as [14C]methane (D. J. Roberts, P. M. Fedorak, and S. E. Hrudey, Can. J. Microbiol. 33:335-338, 1987). The final aromatic compound in the proposed route for m-cresol metabolism was benzoic acid, and its detection in these cultures merges the pathway for the methanogenic degradation of m-cresol with those for the anaerobic metabolism of many phenols
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/AEM.59.7.2229-2238.1993