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Citation
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HERO ID
7307810
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
High Throughput Sediment DNA Sequencing Reveals Azo Dye Degrading Bacteria Inhabit Nearshore Sediments
Author(s)
Zhuang, M; Sanganyado, E; Xu, L; Zhu, J; Li, P; Liu, W
Year
2020
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Microorganisms
ISSN:
2076-2607
Volume
8
Issue
2
Language
English
PMID
32050437
DOI
10.3390/microorganisms8020233
Web of Science Id
WOS:000519618200089
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85079448421&doi=10.3390%2fmicroorganisms8020233&partnerID=40&md5=4225f3ee540c89934eeaf819dbf67c73
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Abstract
Estuaries and coastal environments are often regarded as a critical resource for the bioremediation of organic pollutants such as azo dyes due to their high abundance and diversity of extremophiles. Bioremediation through the activities of azoreductase, laccase, and other associated enzymes plays a critical role in the removal of azo dyes in built and natural environments. However, little is known about the biodegradation genes and azo dye degradation genes residing in sediments from coastal and estuarine environments. In this study, high-throughput sequencing (16S rRNA) of sediment DNA was used to explore the distribution of azo-dye degrading bacteria and their functional genes in estuaries and coastal environments. Unlike laccase genes, azoreductase (azoR), and naphthalene degrading genes were ubiquitous in the coastal and estuarine environments. The relative abundances of most functional genes were higher in the summer compared to winter at locations proximal to the mouths of the Hanjiang River and its distributaries. These results suggested inland river discharges influenced the occurrence and abundance of azo dye degrading genes in the nearshore environments. Furthermore, the azoR genes had a significant negative relationship with total organic carbon, Hg, and Cr (p < 0.05). This study provides critical insights into the biodegradation potential of indigenous microbial communities in nearshore environments and the influence of environmental factors on microbial structure, composition, and function which is essential for the development of technologies for bioremediation in azo dye contaminated sites.
Keywords
article; azo dyes; biodegradation; bioremediation; estuaries; extremophiles; laccase; naphthalene; sediments; total organic carbon
Tags
IRIS
•
Naphthalene
Database Searches
PubMed
Combined data set
Data set for title/abstract screening
Excluded - PECO criteria not met (TIAB)
January 2021 Update
PubMed
Other
•
Naphthalene (2021 Evidence mapping publication)
Database Searches
PubMed
Combined data set
Data set for title/abstract screening
Excluded – PECO criteria not met
January 2021 Update
PubMed
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