Degradation and solubilization of Chinese lignite by Penicillium sp. P6
Penicillium sp. P6, isolated from coal mine soil at the Qiantong colliery, Liaoning Province, Northwest China, can degrade Chinese lignite in 36 h on a plate colony and in 48 h, using a four-day cultured cell-free filtrate. Results of elemental analysis and IR spectrometry indicated that solubilized...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Applied biochemistry and microbiology 2006-01, Vol.42 (1), p.52-55 |
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description | Penicillium sp. P6, isolated from coal mine soil at the Qiantong colliery, Liaoning Province, Northwest China, can degrade Chinese lignite in 36 h on a plate colony and in 48 h, using a four-day cultured cell-free filtrate. Results of elemental analysis and IR spectrometry indicated that solubilized products exhibited some alterations in comparison to the original lignite. The amount of fulvic acid extracted from the biodegraded lignite was high, and the molecular distribution of humic acids from biodegraded lignite changed distinctively in comparison to that extracted from control lignite, possibly due to the depolymerization associated with fungal biodegradation.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
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P6</atitle><jtitle>Applied biochemistry and microbiology</jtitle><date>2006-01-01</date><risdate>2006</risdate><volume>42</volume><issue>1</issue><spage>52</spage><epage>55</epage><pages>52-55</pages><issn>0003-6838</issn><eissn>1608-3024</eissn><abstract>Penicillium sp. P6, isolated from coal mine soil at the Qiantong colliery, Liaoning Province, Northwest China, can degrade Chinese lignite in 36 h on a plate colony and in 48 h, using a four-day cultured cell-free filtrate. Results of elemental analysis and IR spectrometry indicated that solubilized products exhibited some alterations in comparison to the original lignite. 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subjects | Biodegradation Coal mines Filtrate Fulvic acids Humic acids Lignite Penicillium Soils Spectrometry |
title | Degradation and solubilization of Chinese lignite by Penicillium sp. P6 |
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