Dehalogenation
of Chlorobenzenes, Dichlorotoluenes,
and Tetrachloroethene by Three <i>Dehalobacter</i> spp.
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Abstract
Three enrichment cultures containing <i>Dehalobacter</i> spp. were developed that dehalogenate each
of the dichlorobenzene
(DCB) isomers to monochlorobenzene (MCB), and the strains using 1,2-DCB
(12DCB1) or 1,3-DCB (13DCB1) are now considered isolated, whereas
the strain using 1,4-DCB (14DCB1) is considered highly enriched. In
this study, we examined the dehalogenation capability of each strain
to use chlorobenzenes with three or more chlorines, tetrachloroethene
(PCE), or dichlorotoluene (DCT) isomers. Strain 12DCB1 preferentially
dehalogenated singly flanked chlorines, but not doubly flanked or
unflanked chlorines. It dehalogenated pentachlorobenzene to MCB with
little buildup of intermediates. Strain 13DCB1, which could use either
1,3-DCB or 1,2-DCB, demonstrated the widest dehalogenation spectrum
of electron acceptors tested, and dehalogenated every chlorobenzene
isomer except 1,4-DCB. Notably, strain 13DCB1 dehalogenated the recalcitrant
1,3,5-trichlorobenzene isomer to MCB, and qPCR of 16S rRNA genes indicated
that strain 13DCB1 grew. Strain 14DCB1 exhibited the narrowest range
of substrate utilization, but was the only strain to dehalogenate
para-substituted chlorines. Strains 12DCB1 and 13DCB1 dehalogenated
PCE to <i>cis</i>-dichloroethene, and all strains dehalogenated
3,4-DCT to monochlorotoluene. These findings show that <i>Dehalobacter</i> spp., like <i>Dehalococcoides</i> spp., are versatile
dehalogenators and should be considered when determining the fate
of chlorinated organics at contaminated sites