Nitrous Oxide is a Potent Inhibitor of Bacterial Reductive Dechlorination

Yin, Y; Yan, J; Chen, G; Murdoch, FK; Pfisterer, N; Löffler, FE

HERO ID

5083254

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

Language

English

PMID

30558413

HERO ID 5083254
In Press No
Year 2018
Title Nitrous Oxide is a Potent Inhibitor of Bacterial Reductive Dechlorination
Authors Yin, Y; Yan, J; Chen, G; Murdoch, FK; Pfisterer, N; Löffler, FE
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 53
Issue 2
Page Numbers 692-701
Abstract Organohalide-respiring bacteria are key players for the turnover of organohalogens. At sites impacted with chlorinated ethenes, bioremediation promotes reductive dechlorination; however, stoichiometric conversion to environmentally benign ethene is not always achieved. We demonstrate that nitrous oxide (N2O), a compound commonly present in groundwater, inhibits organohalide respiration. N2O concentrations in the low micromolar range decreased dechlorination rates and resulted in incomplete dechlorination of tetrachloroethene (PCE) in Geobacter lovleyi strain SZ and of cis-1,2-dichloroethene ( cDCE) and vinyl chloride (VC) in Dehalococcoides mccartyi strain BAV1 axenic cultures. Presumably, N2O interferes with reductive dechlorination by reacting with super-reduced Co(I)-corrinoids of reductive dehalogenases, which is supported by the finding that N2O did not inhibit corrinoid-independent fumarate-to-succinate reduction in strain SZ. Kinetic analyses revealed a best fit to the noncompetitive Michaelis-Menten inhibition model, and determined N2O inhibitory constants, KI, for PCE and cDCE dechlorination of 40.8 ± 3.8 µM and 21.2 ± 3.5 µM in strain SZ and strain BAV1, respectively. The lowest KI value of 9.6 ± 0.4 µM was determined for VC to ethene reductive dechlorination in strain BAV1, suggesting that this crucial dechlorination step for achieving detoxification is most susceptible to N2O inhibition. Groundwater N2O concentrations exceeding 100 µM are not uncommon, especially in watersheds impacted by nitrate runoff from agricultural sources. Thus, dissolved N2O measurements can inform about cDCE and VC stalls at sites impacted with chlorinated ethenes.
Doi 10.1021/acs.est.8b05871
Pmid 30558413
Wosid WOS:000456349900015
Url https://search.proquest.com/docview/2189522718?accountid=171501
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword article; Dehalococcoides mccartyi; Geobacter; agricultural runoff; bacteria; bioremediation; dechlorination; enzymes; ethylene; groundwater; nitrates; nitrous oxide; organochlorine compounds; tetrachloroethylene; vinyl chloride; watersheds
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