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Microbial community succession during crude oil-degrading bacterial enrichment cultivation and construction of a degrading consortium.


ABSTRACT: Microbial community succession during the enrichment of crude-oil-degrading bacteria was analyzed using Illumina high-throughput sequencing to guide bacterial isolation and construction of a bacterial consortium. Community change occurred in 6 days; the most abundant phylum changed from Proteobacteria to Actinobacteria; the most abundant genera were Dietzia and unspecified_Idiomarinaceae. Two crude oil-degrading strains, Rhodococcus sp. OS62-1 and Dietzia sp. OS33, and one weak-crude-oil-degrading strain, Pseudomonas sp. P35, were isolated. A consortium comprising Rhodococcus sp. OS62-1 and Pseudomonas sp. P35 showed the highest crude-oil-degrading efficiency, reaching 85.72 ± 3.21% within 7 days, over a wide pH range (5-11) and salinity (0-80 g·L-1). Consumption of saturated hydrocarbons, aromatic hydrocarbons, and resins was greater by the consortium than by a single strain, as was degradation of short-chain-alkanes (C13-C17) according to gas-chromatography. The bacterial consortium provides technical support for bioremediation of crude oil pollution.

SUBMITTER: Yu T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9672818 | biostudies-literature | 2022

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Microbial community succession during crude oil-degrading bacterial enrichment cultivation and construction of a degrading consortium.

Yu Tianfei T   Liu Xiaodong X   Ai Jiamin J   Wang Jiamin J   Guo Yidan Y   Liu Xinhui X   He Xiaolong X   Deng Zhenshan Z   Jiang Yingying Y  

Frontiers in microbiology 20221104


Microbial community succession during the enrichment of crude-oil-degrading bacteria was analyzed using Illumina high-throughput sequencing to guide bacterial isolation and construction of a bacterial consortium. Community change occurred in 6 days; the most abundant phylum changed from Proteobacteria to Actinobacteria; the most abundant genera were <i>Dietzia</i> and <i>unspecified_Idiomarinaceae</i>. Two crude oil-degrading strains, <i>Rhodococcus</i> sp. OS62-1 and <i>Dietzia</i> sp. OS33, an  ...[more]

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