APPLICATION OF ALKALI-TOLERANT MICROBIAL BACTERIA PDC-1 AND ITS IN-SITU REMEDIATION OF ORGANIC CONTAMINATED SOIL IN MINING AREAS

20250051713 ยท 2025-02-13

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    The present invention discloses an alkali-resistant microbial bacterium PDC-1 and its application. The present invention screens and isolates PDC-1 strain from the soil of a coal gangue stockpile in a coal mine in Shandong, China, which can utilize naphthalene, phenanthrene, anthracene or pyrene as the sole carbon source and has tolerance to heavy metals. The strain of the present invention is capable to degrade various PAHs with the presence of heavy metals. The strain is alkali resistant, simple to cultivate, and has a good application in the bioremediation of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and heavy metal contaminated sites.

    Claims

    1. An alkali-tolerant microbial bacterium PDC-1, belonging to Pseudomonas aeruginosa and deposited in the China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center (deposit number CGMCC NO25957).

    2. An application of the alkali-tolerant microbial bacteria PDC-1 in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons polluted and/or heavy metal polluted water or soil remediation, as described in claim 1: the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are naphthalene, phenanthrene, anthracene and/or pyrene.

    3. The application according to claim 2, is characterized in that the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are selected from one or more of naphthalene, phenanthrene, anthracene, pyrene, benzo[a]pyrene, and benzo[g,h,i]perylene; the heavy metals mentioned are cadmium, chromium, and antimony.

    4. The application according to claim 3, is characterized in that the bacterial suspension of the alkali resistant microbial strain PDC-1 is applied to water or soil contaminated with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and/or heavy metals for remediation.

    5. The cultivation methods of the alkali resistant microbial strain PDC-1 as described in claim 1, are characterized by that: S1: The solid inorganic salt medium containing polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon liquor is incubated on plates at 30-35 C. for about 48-72 hours; S2: Pick a single colony and inoculate it into LB liquid medium, and after shaking at 150-180 rpm at 30-35 C., prepare a bacterial suspension with OD.sub.600=0.5-1.5; S3: Inoculate the bacterial suspension into a fermentation medium and ferment at 30-35 C. with 150-180 rpm for 48-72 hours to obtain the culture medium.

    6. The cultivation method as described in claim 5, is characterized in that fermentation medium is formulated as corn oil 20 g/L, glucose 5 g/L, yeast powder 5 g/L, NaNO.sub.3 35 g/L, NaCl 5 g/L, K.sub.2HPO.sub.4 2 g/L, and distilled water 1 L.

    7. The cultivation method according to claim 6, is characterized in that the number of bacterial cells in the degradation agent is not less than 1.0108 CFU/mL.

    8. The microbial agent containing the alkali resistant bacterium strain PDC-1 as claimed in claim 1 is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons degrading agent.

    9. The microbial agent for degrading polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons as claimed in claim 8 is characterized in that: the microbial strain PDC-1 present in the form of a bacterial suspension.

    10. The microbial agent for degrading polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons as claimed in claim 8 is characterized in that: the microbial agent is obtained by the culture method.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

    [0028] FIG. 1 is the colony morphology of the PDC-1 plate of the present invention;

    [0029] FIG. 2 is the cell morphology of PDC-1 of the present invention;

    [0030] FIG. 3 shows the PDC-1 phylogenetic tree based on the homology of the 16S rRNA gene sequence;

    [0031] FIG. 4 is the degradation kinetic curve of PDC-1 to phenanthrene of the present invention;

    [0032] FIG. 5 is the degradation ability of PDC-1 to different concentrations of phenanthrene of the present invention;

    [0033] FIG. 6 is the degradation ability of PDC-1 to phenanthrene at different temperatures of the present invention;

    [0034] FIG. 7 is the degradation ability of PDC-1 to phenanthrene at different pH values of the present invention;

    [0035] FIG. 8 is the degradation capacity of PDC-1 to different 6 typical polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons of the present invention;

    [0036] FIG. 9 is the degradation ability of PDC-1 to phenanthrene at different Cd.sup.2+ concentrations of the present invention.

    [0037] FIG. 10 is the degradation ability of PDC-1 to phenanthrene in soil with different Cd.sup.2+ concentrations of the present invention.

    BIOMATERIAL PRESERVATION INFORMATION

    [0038] Microbial bacterium PDC-1, with a deposit number CGMCC NO25957, taxonomic named Pseudomonas aeruginosa, deposited in the China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center (abbreviated as CGMCC) on Oct. 24, 2022. The address of the depositary unit: No. 3, Courtyard 1, Beichen West Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing.

    SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS

    [0039] The present invention is further illustrated below in conjunction with the drawings of the description and specific embodiments.

    Embodiment 1: Isolation and Identification of PDC-1

    1. Sample Source

    [0040] Soil was collected from the polluted site of coal gangue stockpile in Shandong coal mine, and the high-concentration phenanthrene was used as the carbon source for long-term acclimation, and the efficient phenanthrene degrading bacteria were obtained through multiple screening, separation, and purification.

    2. Culture Medium

    2.1 Inorganic Salt Medium

    [0041] Inorganic salt medium is used for microbial culture of samples, pure bacteria, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon degradation experiments under microbial agent conditions. The medium formulation is shown in Table 1. The preparation method is to add each component to distilled water, stir and mix, adjust the pH to 7.2-7.5, and sterilize.

    TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Inorganic salt medium formulations Name of the reagent Concentration (mg/L) Na.sub.2HPO.sub.4 2800 (NH.sub.4).sub.2SO.sub.4 500 CuCl.sub.22H.sub.2O 0.001 H.sub.3BO.sub.3 0.03 FeSO.sub.47H.sub.2O 0.2 MnCl.sub.24H.sub.2O 0.003 NiCl.sub.26H.sub.2O 0.002 KH.sub.2PO.sub.4 1000 Na.sub.2EDTA 0.5 CoCl.sub.26H.sub.2O 0.02 ZnSO.sub.47H.sub.2O 0.01 Na.sub.2MoO.sub.42H.sub.2O 0.003

    2.2 Nutrient Medium

    [0042] The types and components of liquid nutrient medium used in this experiment are shown in Tables 2 and 3. The corresponding solid medium is the original medium formulation, and 12-15 g/L agar powder is added. If the culture conditions of the strain are not specified, the pH of the medium is adjusted to 7.2-7.5. The preparation method is to add each component to water, stir and mix well, and sterilize at 121 C. for 15 minutes at high temperature and humidity heat.

    TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 LB medium components Name of the reagent Concentration (g/L) peptone 10 Yeast extract powder 5 NaCl 10

    TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Composition of fermentation medium Name of the reagent Concentration (g/L) corn oil 20 glucose 5 NaNO.sub.3 5 Yeast extract powder 5 K.sub.2HPO.sub.4 2 NaCl 5

    3. Acclimation, Screening, and Isolation of Strains

    [0043] The collected contaminated soil was added to the sterilized inorganic salt medium with a mass ratio of 1:10 and incubated at 150-180 rpm and 30-35 C. for 5 days. It was then inoculated at a concentration of 100 mg L.sup.1 phenanthrene and inoculated in 10% inorganic salt medium, placed in a 30 C. incubator protected from light and shaking, and the operation was repeated 3 times.

    [0044] Strain acclimation is based on phenanthrene as the only carbon source in the inorganic salt medium, and 5 days is an acclimation cycle. At the end of the cycle, 10% of the inoculum volume was transferred to fresh medium of the same system and the above process was repeated three times.

    [0045] The culture samples obtained above were diluted and separated by coating, and the samples were separated with inorganic salt medium containing 100 mg/L phenanthrene. The coated samples were placed at 30 C. in the dark and cultured for 1-2 days, and a number of single colonies with differences were selected according to the morphology, size, color, transparency and other characteristics of the colonies, and purified and cultured on the nutrient medium plate. Purified single colonies were picked for storage.

    4. Strain Identification

    [0046] According to the results of Gram staining reaction, morphological and physiological characteristics of the strains, the strains were preliminarily identified. The plate colony morphology of the strain PDC-1 is shown in FIG. 1, and the morphology under light microscopy is shown in FIG. 2. Its main biological characteristics: the thallus is short rod-shaped, gram-negative bacilli, and the colonies on the LB solid plate are round, light green, and the surface is raised, smooth, and the edges are irregular and opaque.

    [0047] Strain 16S rDNA Identification: Single colony lysis was used as template by PCR with primers. The PCR reaction conditions were: pre-denaturation at 94 C. for 5 min, denaturation at 94 C. for 30 s, annealing at 54 C. for 30 s, extension at 72 C. for 1 min 30 s, 24 cycles, and finally extension at 72 C. for 10 min. The 16S rRNA gene sequence was sequenced and compared with the NCBI library, and the homology of the strain PDC-1 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa was 99.93%, indicating that the strain was Pseudomonas. The phylogenetic tree is constructed as shown in FIG. 3.

    Embodiment 2: PDC-1 Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Degradation Experiment

    1. Preparation of Microbial Agent

    [0048] (1) Pick the purified single colonies in the plate and inoculate them into LB liquid medium, and prepare an OD.sub.600=1 bacterial suspension at 30 C. at 180 rpm shaking culture. [0049] (2) Inoculate 10% of the bacterial suspension into a new fermentation medium, and fermented at 180 rpm at 30 C. shaking for 72 h, and the concentration of the fermentation broth was detected to be 10.sup.8-10 CFU/mL, and the obtained fermentation broth was PDC-1 liquid inoculum.

    2. Microbial Agent Degradation of Phenanthrene

    [0050] 2 mL of the prepared PDC-1 liquid inoculant was inoculated into 50 mL of inorganic salt medium containing 50 mg/L phenanthrene, with phenanthrene as the only carbon source, the medium was placed in a constant temperature shaker at 30 C. for culture, and the control group was not inoculated with fungicide, and a total of 3 groups of repeated experiments were set up, and the phenanthrene concentration and OD.sub.600 in the medium were measured every day.

    [0051] Add 20 mL of chromatographic pure n-hexane to the conical flask of the culture medium, sealed and shaken at 200 rpm for 30 min, then, liquid-liquid extraction is carried out through a separating funnel to separate and collect n-hexane, and repeated twice. All the collected n-hexane extract was concentrated by nitrogen blowing instrument, the volume was fixed to 10 mL, 1 mL of nitrogen was blown to nearly dry, and then the volume was fixed to 1 mL with chromatography pure methanol through a 0.22 m filter membrane, loaded into a brown liquid phase vial, and the concentration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons was determined by the method of high performance liquid chromatography (HJ 478-2009). The determination of OD.sub.600 was to take 1 mL of solution when the UV spectrophotometer was adjusted to 600 nm, and the initial inorganic salt containing phenanthrene was zeroed out, and then the sample was determined. The degradation kinetics and growth curves of phenanthrene after the addition of inoculants are shown in FIG. 4, and the bacterial density of the medium reached the highest on 2 days and degraded to less than 25 mg/L after 6 days.

    3. Phenanthrene Degradation Under Different Conditions in Liquid Medium

    [0052] 2 mL of PDC-1 liquid inoculant was inoculated into 50 mL of inorganic salt medium containing 25 mg/L, 50 mg/L, 100 mg/L, 150 mg/L and 200 mg/L phenanthrene, respectively, and the medium was placed in a constant temperature shaker at 30 C. for 180 rpm. The phenanthrene concentration in the medium is determined after 6 days and the assay is repeated 3 times. The degradation rate of PDC-1 microbial agent was higher with 54% and 57% at the phenanthrene concentrations of 50 mg/L and 150 mg/L, respectively.

    [0053] 2 mL of the prepared PDC-1 liquid inoculant was inoculated into 50 mL of inorganic salt medium containing 50 mg/L phenanthrene, and the medium was placed in a constant temperature shaker at 20 C., 25 C., 30 C., 35 C. and 40 C. for 180 rpm, and the phenanthrene concentration in the medium was measured after 6 days, and the determination was repeated 3 times. The degradation rate of phenanthrene at different temperatures is shown in FIG. 6, and the degradation effect of microbial agent is better at 30-35 C., and the degradation rate is maintained at more than 50%.

    [0054] The pH value of 50 mL of inorganic salt medium containing 50 mg/L phenanthrene was adjusted to 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 respectively, and 2 mL of PDC-1 liquid inoculant was inoculated into these mediums, placed in a constant temperature shaker at 30 C. for 180 rpm for incubation, and the phenanthrene concentration in the medium was measured after 6 days, and the determination was repeated 3 times. The degradation rate of phenanthrene under different pH values is shown in FIG. 7, when the pH value of the medium is between 7 and 8, the degradation rate of the microbial agent is the highest, which is maintained at 50%-53%, and when the pH reaches 10, the microbial agent can still achieve about 30% degradation rate.

    [0055] 50 mL of inorganic salt medium containing naphthalene 50 mg/L, phenanthrene 50 mg/L, anthracene 50 mg/L, pyrene 20 mg/L, benzo[a]pyrene 20 mg/L, and benzo[g,h,i]perylene 20 mg/L was prepared, and 2 mLPDC-1 inoculants were inoculated into the medium and placed in a constant temperature shaker at 30 C. for 180 rpm for culture, and the concentration of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the medium was measured after 6 days, and the determination was repeated 3 times. The degradation rates of six PAHs by PDC-1 are shown in FIG. 8, and the degradation rates of the six PAHs are 93.2% naphthalene, 45.8% phenanthrene, 63.2% anthracene, 33.7% pyrene, 38.1% benzo[a]pyrene, and 27.5% benzo[g,h,i]perylene, respectively.

    [0056] 50 mL of inorganic salt medium containing 50 mg/L phenanthrene was prepared, and 0.8 mL, 1.6 mL, 3.2 mL, and 4.8 mL of CdCl.sub.2 solution with a concentration of 10 g/L were added to each medium to make Cd.sup.2+ concentrations were 5 mg/L, 10 mg/L, 20 mg/L, 40 mg/L, and then 2 mL PDC-1 microbial agent was added to each medium, placed in a constant temperature shaker at 30 C. for 180 rpm for culture, and the phenanthrene concentration in the medium was measured after 6 days, and the measurement was repeated 3 times. The degradation rate of PDC-1 at different Cd.sup.2+ concentrations is shown in FIG. 9, when the concentration of Cd.sup.2+ is <5 mg/L, the metabolic activity of the microbial agent is not inhibited, and the degradation rate is maintained at more than 45%, and when the concentration of Cd.sup.2+ reaches 20 mg/L, the degradation rate of phenanthrene is basically maintained at more than 25%.

    4. Degradation of Phenanthrene Under Different Conditions in Contaminated Soil

    [0057] Experimental setup: The soil was selected and mixed evenly after passing through a 10-mesh sieve. 20 mg of phenanthrene was dissolved in 10 mL of acetone and added to 100 g of soil to prepare 200 mg/kg of phenanthrene contaminated soil subsample, and 1.6 mL of CdCl.sub.2 solution with a concentration of 10 g/L was added to 10 g of soil to prepare 1 g/kg of Cd.sup.2+ contaminated soil subsample. 86-90 g of soil, 10 g of phenanthrene contaminated soil subsample and 1-4 g of Cd.sup.2+ contaminated soil subsample were added to the beaker, and the contaminated soil with phenanthrene concentration of 20 mg/kg and Cd.sup.2+ concentration of 10 mg/kg, 20 mg/kg and 40 mg/kg was prepared evenly. 5 mL PDC-1 microbial agent was added to 100 g of contaminated soil and mixed evenly to keep the moisture content at about 20%, and it was placed in a constant temperature incubator at 30 C. for 20 days, and soil samples were taken at intervals of 10 days to determine the concentration of phenanthrene.

    [0058] Determination of phenanthrene concentration in soil: PAHs in soil were extracted according to the National Environmental Protection Standard of the People's Republic of China Determination of Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in soil and sediment by high performance liquid chromatography. 5 g of soil samples were weighed for freeze-drying, 15 mL of acetone-n-hexane (1:1) mixed solution was added after grinding through a 60-mesh sieve, sealed and soaked in the dark for 8 hours, then ultrasonic treatment for 30 min, and then centrifugation poured out the solution, and the extraction was repeated 3 times. The extract was mixed and concentrated to about 1 mL by nitrogen blowing, and purified by magnesium silicate solid-phase extraction column. The purified eluent was nitrogen-blown again and concentrated to nearly dry, about 3 mL of methanol was added, and repeated three times to the final volume was 1 mL. The determination was performed by high-performance liquid chromatography with a sample volume of 10 L, a column temperature of 35 C., a mobile phase of A Methanol:B water (80:20), and a detection wavelength of 252 nm.

    [0059] The degradation rate of phenanthrene in soil with different Cd.sup.2+ concentrations is shown in FIG. 10, when the soil Cd.sup.2+ concentration 20 mg/kg, the microbial activity was not significantly inhibited, and the degradation rate of phenanthrene in the soil was maintained at 61%-73%, and when the soil Cd.sup.2+ concentration reached 40 mg/kg, the metabolic activity was inhibited and the degradation rate was achieved down to about 47%.

    [0060] The above is only the preferred embodiment of the present invention, and it should be noted that the preferred embodiment shall not be regarded as a restriction on the present invention, and the scope of protection of the present invention shall be subject to the scope limited by the claims. For a person skilled in the art, a number of improvements and embellishments may also be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention, and these improvements and embellishments shall also be regarded as the scope of protection of the present invention.