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Query: EC:3.4.23.17 (PCE)
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A two-stage anaerobic-aerobic biofilm reactor successfully degraded a mixture of chlorinated organic compounds to water-soluble metabolic intermediates and carbon dioxide. Reductive dechlorination of hexachlorobenzene (HCB), tetrachloroethylene (PCE), and chloroform (CF) occurred on all tested primary carbon sources such as glucose, methanol, and acetate. However, the extent of dechlorination was maximum when the anaerobic biofilm column was fed acetate as a primary carbon source. HCB, PCE, and CF were dechlorinated to the levels of tri- and dichlorinated products (99, 80, and 32%, respectively) with acetate in the feed. This is important, since these less-chlorinated compounds can be metabolized by the aerobic biofilm. The effluent from the anaerobic biofilm column was fed directly into the aerobic column. After both columns, the total amount transformed into nonvolatile intermediates and carbon dioxide was 94, 96, and 83% for [14C]HCB, [14C]trichloroethylene, and [14C]CF, respectively. This research shows the potential application of this novel two-stage bioreactor system for treating groundwaters and industrial effluents composed of highly chlorinated aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons.
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PMID:Complete degradation of polychlorinated hydrocarbons by a two-stage biofilm reactor. 178 18

Hydrocarbons such as TCE, PCE, TCA, gasoline and kerosene which are widely used in the industry, enter soils and groundwater from chemical waste disposal sites and from accidents. These types of substances are the most commonly encountered groundwater contaminants nationwide. Biotransformation of dissolved chlorinated hydrocarbons can provide complete mineralization to harmless end products such as CO2. It is the objective of this work to investigate the biodegradation and biotransformation, and transport of hydrocarbons in groundwater. This will be achieved first by defining and identifying relevant physical and biological processes which contribute to the fate of hydrocarbon contaminants in unsaturated/saturated soils, and providing a conceptual framework for incorporating these processes into a mathematical formulation. The conservation principles expressed in terms of quantifications of the physical, chemical and microbial processes described above lead to a system governing the phenomenon which consists of nonlinear partial differential equations. Microbial transformation conducted by both anaerobic and aerobic bacteria are considered.
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PMID:Theoretical modeling of biodegradation and biotransformation of hydrocarbons in subsurface environments. 233 35

Tetrachloroethylene (PCE) and trichloroethylene (TCE), common industrial solvents, are among the most frequent contaminants found in groundwater supplies. Due to the potential toxicity and carcinogenicity of chlorinated ethylenes, knowledge about their transformation potential is important in evaluating their environmental fate. The results of this study confirm that PCE can be transformed by reductive dehalogenation to TCE, dichloroethylene, and vinyl chloride (VC) under anaerobic conditions. In addition, [14C]PCE was at least partially mineralized to CO2. Mineralization of 24% of the PCE occurred in a continuous-flow fixed-film methanogenic column with a liquid detention time of 4 days. TCE was the major intermediate formed, but traces of dichloroethylene isomers and VC were also found. In other column studies under a different set of methanogenic conditions, nearly quantitative conversion of PCE to VC was found. These studies clearly demonstrate that TCE and VC are major intermediates in PCE biotransformation under anaerobic conditions and suggest that potential exists for the complete mineralization of PCE to CO2 in soil and aquifer systems and in biological treatment processes.
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PMID:Biotransformation of tetrachloroethylene to trichloroethylene, dichloroethylene, vinyl chloride, and carbon dioxide under methanogenic conditions. 392 27

Eight homoacetogenic strains of the genera Acetobacterium, Clostridium and Sporomusa were tested for their ability to dechlorinate tetrachloroethylene (perchloroethene, PCE). Of the organisms tested only Sporomusa ovata was able to reductively dechlorinate PCE with methanol as an electron donor. Resting cells of S. ovata reductively dechlorinated PCE at a rate of 9.8 nmol h-1 (mg protein)-1 to trichloroethylene (TCE) as the sole product. The dechlorination activity depended on concomitant acetogenesis from methanol and CO2. Cell-free extracts of S. ovata, Clostridium formicoaceticum, Acetobacterium woodii, and the methanogenic bacterium Methanolobus tindarius transformed PCE to TCE with Ti(III) or carbon monoxide as electron donors. Corrinoids were shown in S. ovata to be involved in the dechlorination reaction of PCE to TCE as evident from the reversible inhibition with propyl iodide. Rates of dechlorination followed a pseudo-first-order kinetic.
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PMID:Transformation of tetrachloroethylene to trichloroethylene by homoacetogenic bacteria. 798 92

We have been studying an anaerobic enrichment culture which, by using methanol as an electron donor, dechlorinates tetrachloroethene (PCE) to vinyl chloride and ethene. Our previous results indicated that H2 was the direct electron donor for rductive dechlorination of PCE by the methanol-PCE culture. Most-probable-number counts performed on this culture indicated low numbers (< or equal to 10(4)/ml)) of methanogens and PCE dechlorinators using methanol and high numbers (> or equal to 10(6)/ml)) of sulfidogens, methanol-utilizing acetogens, fermentative heterotrophs, and PCE dechlorinators using H2. An anaerobic H2-PCE enrichment culture was derived from a 10(-6) dilution of the methanol-PCE culture. This H2-PCE culture used PCE at increasing rates over time when transferred to fresh medium and could be transferred indefinitely with H2 as the electron donor for the PCE dechlorination, indicating that H2-PCE can serve as an electron donor-acceptor pair for energy conservation and growth. Sustained PCE dechlorination by this culture was supported by supplementation with 0.05 mg of vitamin B12 per liter, 25% (vol/vol) anaerobic digestor sludge supernatant, and 2 mM acetate, which presumably served as a carbon source. Neither methanol nor acetate could serve as an electron donor for dechlorination by the H2-PCE culture, and it did not produce CH4 or acetate from H2-CO2 or methanol, indicating the absence of methanogenic and acetogenic bacteria. Microscopic observatios of the pruified H2-PCE culture showed only two major morphotypes: irregular cocci and small rods.
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PMID:Characterization of an H2-utilizing enrichment culture that reductively dechlorinates tetrachloroethene to vinyl chloride and ethene in the absence of methanogenesis and acetogenesis. 852 5

Thermophilic anaerobic biodegradation of tetrachloroethene (PCE) was investigated with various inocula from geothermal and nongeothermal areas. Only polluted harbor sediment resulted in a stable enrichment culture that converted PCE via trichloroethene to cis-1, 2-dichloroethene at the optimum temperature of 60 to 65 degrees C. After several transfers, methanogens were eliminated from the culture. Dechlorination was supported by lactate, pyruvate, fructose, fumarate, and malate as electron donor but not by H2, formate, or acetate. Fumarate and L-malate led to the highest dechlorination rate. In the absence of PCE, fumarate was fermented to acetate, H2, CO2, and succinate. With PCE, less H2 was formed, suggesting that PCE competed for the reducing equivalents leading to H2. PCE dechlorination, apparently, was not outcompeted by fumarate as electron acceptor. At the optimum dissolved PCE concentration of approximately 60 microM, a high dechlorination rate of 1.1 micromol h-1 mg-1 (dry weight) was found, which indicates that the dechlorination is not a cometabolic activity. Microscopic analysis of the fumarate-grown culture showed the dominance of a long thin rod. Molecular analysis, however, indicated the presence of two dominant species, both belonging to the low-G+C gram positives. The highest similarity was found with the genus Dehalobacter (90%), represented by the halorespiring organism Dehalobacter restrictus, and with the genus Desulfotomaculum (86%).
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PMID:Reductive dechlorination of tetrachloroethene to cis-1, 2-dichloroethene by a thermophilic anaerobic enrichment culture. 1034 7

Although the potential for KMnO4 to destroy chlorinated ethenes in situ was first recognized more than a decade ago, the geochemical processes that accompany the oxidation have not previously been examined. In this study, aqueous KMnO4 solutions (10-30 g/L) were injected into an unconfined sand aquifer contaminated by the dense non-aqueous-phase liquid (DNAPL) tetrachloroethylene (PCE). The effects of the injections were monitored using depth-specific, multilevel groundwater samplers, and continuous cores. Two distinct geochemical zones evolved within several days after injection. In one zone where DNAPL is present, reactions between KMnO4 and dissolved PCE resulted in the release of abundant chloride and hydrogen ions to the water. Calcite and dolomite dissolved, buffering the pH in the range of 5.8-6.5, releasing Ca, Mg, and CO2 to the pore water. In this zone, the aqueous Ca/Cl concentration ratio is close to 5:12, consistent with the following reaction for the oxidation of PCE in a carbonate-rich aquifer: 3C2Cl4 + 5CaCO3(s) + 4KMnO4 + 2H+ --> 11CO2 + 4MnO2(s) + H2O + 12Cl- + 5Ca2+ + 4K+. In addition to Mg from dolomite dissolution, increases in the concentration of Mg as well as Na may result from exchange with K at cation-exchange sites. In the second zone, where lesser amounts of PCE were present, KMnO4 persisted in the aquifer for more than 14 months, and the porewater pH increased graduallyto between 9 and 10 as a resultof reaction between KMnO4 and H2O. A small increase in SO4 concentrations in the zones invaded by KMnO4 suggests that KMnO4 injections caused oxidation of sulfide minerals. There are important benefits of carbonate mineral buffering during DNAPL remediation by in situ oxidation. In a carbonate-buffered system, Mn(VII) is reduced to Mn(IV) and is immobilized in the groundwater by precipitating as insoluble manganese oxide. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analyses of the manganese oxide coatings on aquifer mineral grains have detected the impurities Al, Ca, Cl, Cu, Pb, P, K, Si, S, Ti, U, and Zn indicating that, similar to natural systems, precipitation of manganese oxide is accompanied by coprecipitation of other elements. In addition, the consumption of excess KMnO4 by reaction with reduced minerals such as magnetite will be minimized because the rates of these reactions increase with decreasing pH. Aquifer cores collected after the KMnO4 injections exhibit dark brown to black bands of manganese oxide reaction products in sand layers where DNAPL was originally present. Mineralogical investigations indicate that the manganese oxide coatings are uniformly distributed over the mineral grains. Observations of the coatings using transmission electron microscopy indicate that they are on the order of 1 microm thick, and consequently, the decrease in porosity through the formation of the coatings is negligible.
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PMID:Geochemical reactions resulting from in situ oxidation of PCE-DNAPL by KMnO4 in a sandy aquifer. 1134 43

Bioventing principles have been applied to completely dechlorinate tetrachloroethylene vapors in the unsaturated zone in a sequential anaerobic-aerobic pattern. The aerobic step yields trans-DCE and VC as PCE reductive dechlorination byproducts, while TCE and cis-DCE are observed as intermediates. The aerobic step results in rapid oxidation of the VC and trans-DCE to carbon dioxide. Hydrogen was delivered in the gas phase as a reducing agent for the anaerobic step at levels of 1%, and oxygen at 4.2% was used as an electron acceptor in the aerobic step. PCE and VC half lives in the anaerobic and aerobic steps respectively, where less than 10 min.
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PMID:Complete remediation of PCE contaminated unsaturated soils by sequential anaerobic-aerobic bioventing. 1137 54

Chlorinated ethenes are pollutants in contaminated soil and groundwater, and one of the efficient way to remove them is biodegradation. In this paper, the microbial breakdown of PCE, cis-DCE and VC with initial concentrations of 100 mumol/L were studied under different redox conditions at temperature 20 degrees C. The results showed that in the presence of ferric iron and carbon dioxide, PCE were dechlorinated to TCE (0.26/day) and cis-DCE (0.31/day), respectively. In the presence of fatty acids and without competition from inorganic electron acceptors, all the studied chlorinated compounds were completely dechlorinated to ethenes. However, the degradation rates of cis-DCE and VC (0.04/day) were much lower than that of PCE (0.57/day). Under denitrifying, manganese reducing and sulfate reducing conditions, no degradation of chloroethenes was observed. When the temperature was lowered to 12 degrees C, the activities of dechlorinating microbes were also reduced, nevertheless, the completely reductive dechlorination of chloroethenes still occurred.
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PMID:[Dechlorination of chlorinated ethenes under different redox conditions]. 1204 14

A study to evaluate the dechlorination end points and the most promising electron donors to stimulate the reductive dechlorination process at the chloroethene-contaminated Bachman Road site in Oscoda, MI, was conducted. Aquifer materials were collected from inside the plume and used to establish microcosms under a variety of electron donor conditions using chlorinated ethenes as electron acceptors. All microcosms that received an electron donor showed dechlorination activity, but the end points depended on the sampling location, indicating a heterogeneous distribution of the dechlorinating populations in the aquifer. Interestingly, several microcosms that received acetate as the only electron donor completely dechlorinated PCE to ethene. All acetate-amended microcosms rapidly converted PCE to cis-DCE, whereas PCE dechlorination in H2-fed microcosms only occurred after a pronounced lag time and after acetate had accumulated by H2/CO2 acetogenic activity. The microcosm experiments were corroborated by defined co-culture experiments, which demonstrated that H2 sustained PCE to cis-DCE dechlorination by acetotrophic populations in the presence of H2/CO2 acetogens. In sediment-free nonmethanogenic enrichment cultures derived from ethene-producing microcosms, acetate alone supported complete reductive dechlorination of chloroethenes to ethene, although the addition of H2 resulted in higher cis-DCE and VC dechlorination rates. Measurements of H2 production and consumption suggested that syntrophic acetate-oxidizing population(s) were active in the enrichment cultures. These findings demonstrated that either acetate or H2 alone can be sufficient to promote complete
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PMID:Acetate versus hydrogen as direct electron donors to stimulate the microbial reductive dechlorination process at chloroethene-contaminated sites. 1226 47


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