2008 Joint Annual Meeting (5-9 Oct. 2008): Pyrene Biodegradation in Two Soils.

746-14 Pyrene Biodegradation in Two Soils.



Wednesday, 8 October 2008
George R. Brown Convention Center, Exhibit Hall E
Duane C. Wolf1, Kaaron J. Davis1, John D. Mattice1, Seong-Jae Kim2, Oh-Gew Kweon2, Carl E. Cerniglia2 and Greg J. Thoma3, (1)Department of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Sciences, University of Arkansas, Plant Science 115, Fayetteville, AR 72701
(2)Division of Microbiology, National Center for Toxicological Research, 3900 NCTR Road, Jefferson, AR 72079
(3)Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Arkansas, 3202 Bell Engineering, Fayetteville, AR 72701
Pyrene is a polyaromatic hydrocarbon that exhibits variable biodegradation rates in soils. The objective of the laboratory incubation study was to determine the mineralization rate of 14C-labeled pyrene in two soils. A Captina silt loam and a Roxana loam were unamended or amended with 200 mg pyrene/kg soil and the four replications of each treatment were maintained at a moisture potential of -33 kPa and 24°C. The Captina and Roxana had initial pyrene degrader numbers of ≤2.70 and 3.78 log MPN/g, respectively. After 16 weeks, 2% of the 14C pyrene was recovered as 14CO2 from the Captina soil. During the 16-week incubation, a 5-week acclimation period was observed followed by rapid biodegradation of pyrene resulting in 40% mineralization of the labeled pyrene in the Roxana soil. For the Captina soil, with or without pyrene addition, the respiration rate was 69 and 68 mg C-CO2/100 g soil, respectively. For Roxana soil, with or without pyrene, the respiration rate was 21 and 13 mg C-CO2/100 g soil, respectively. Pyrene biodegradation rates were determined by the number and activity of pyrene degrading microorganisms indigenous to the two soils. Real-time PCR and microarray assays are being developed to detect PAH degradative genes to assess the functional diversity of pyrene degradation in the two soils.