4.7 Article

Fenpropathrin Biodegradation Pathway in Bacillus sp DG-02 and Its Potential for Bioremediation of Pyrethroid-Contaminated Soils

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 62, Issue 10, Pages 2147-2157

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf404908j

Keywords

Bacillus sp DG-02; fenpropathrin; bioremediation; metabolites; biodegradation pathway; kinetics

Funding

  1. Guangdong Hopson-Pearl River Education Development Foundation (HPEDF)

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The widely used insecticide fenpropathrin in agriculture has become a public concern because of its heavy environmental contamination and toxic effects on mammals, yet little is known about the kinetic and metabolic behaviors of this pesticide. This study reports the degradation lcinetics and metabolic pathway of fenpropathrin in Bacillus sp. DG-02, previously isolated from the pyrethroid-manufacturing wastewater treatment system. Up to 93.3% of 50 mg L-1 fenpropathrin was degraded by Bacillus sp. DG-02 within 72 h, and the degradation rate parameters q(max), K-s, and K-i were determined to be 0.05 h(-1), 9.0 mg L-1, and 694.8 mg L-1, respectively. Analysis of the degradation products by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry led to identification of seven metabolites of fenpropathrin, which suggest that fenpropathrin could be degraded first by cleavage of its carboxylester linkage and diaryl bond, followed by degradation of the aromatic ring and subsequent metabolism. In addition to degradation of fenpropathrin, this strain was also found to be capable of degrading a wide range of synthetic pyrethroids including deltamethrin, lambda-cyhalothrin, beta-cypermethrin, beta-cyfluthrin, bifenthrin, and permethrin, which are also widely used insecticides with environmental contamination problems with the degradation process following the first-order kinetic model. Bioaugmentation of fenpropathrin-contaminated soils with strain DG-02 significantly enhanced the disappearance rate of fenpropathrin, and its half-life was sharply reduced in the soils. Taken together, these results depict the biodegradation mechanisms of fenpropathrin and also highlight the promising potentials of Bacillus sp. DG-02 in bioremediation of pyrethroid-contaminated soils.

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