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. 1996 Oct;62(10):3910–3913. doi: 10.1128/aem.62.10.3910-3913.1996

Genetic exchange in soil between introduced chlorobenzoate degraders and indigenous biphenyl degraders.

D D Focht 1, D B Searles 1, S C Koh 1
PMCID: PMC168206  PMID: 8837452

Abstract

Pseudomonas aeruginosa JB2, a chlorobenzoate degrader, was inoculated into soil having indigenous biphenyl degraders but no identifiable 2-chlorobenzoate (2CBa) or 2,5-dichlorobenzoate (2,5DCBa) degraders. The absence of any indigenous chlorobenzoate degraders was noted by the failure to obtain enrichment cultures with the addition of 2CBa, 3CBa, or 2,5DCBa and by the failure of soil DNA to hybridize to the tfdC gene, which encodes ortho fission of chlorocatechols. In contrast, DNA extracted from inoculated soils hybridized to this probe. Bacteria able to utilize both biphenyl and 2CBa as growth substrates were absent in uninoculated soil, but their presence increased with time in the inoculated soils. This increase was related kinetically to the growth of biphenyl degraders. Pseudomonas sp. strain AW, a dominant biphenyl degrader, was selected as a possible parental strain. Eight of nine recombinant strains, chosen at random, had high phenotypic similarity (90% or more) to the inoculant; the other, strain JB2-M, had 78% similarity. Two hybrid strains, P. aeruginosa JB2-3 and Pseudomonas sp. JB2-M, were the most effective of all strains, including strain AW, in metabolizing polychlorinated biphenyls (Aroclor 1242). Repetitive extragenic palindromic-PCR analysis of putative parental strains JB2 and AW and the two recombinant strains JB2-3 and JB2-M showed similar fragments among the recombinants and JB2 but not AW. These results indicate that the bph genes were transferred to the chlorobenzoate-degrading inoculant from indigenous biphenyl degraders.

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Selected References

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