Monitoring the impact of bioaugmentation with a PAH-degrading strain on different soil microbiomes using pyrosequencing

The effect of bioaugmentation with <i>Sphingobium</i> sp. AM strain on different soils microbiomes, pristine soil (PS), chronically contaminated soil (IPK) and recently contaminated soil (Phe) and their implications in bioremediation efficiency was studied by focusing on the ecology that...

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Autores principales: Festa, Sabrina, Macchi, Marianela, Cortés, Federico, Morelli, Irma Susana, Coppotelli, Bibiana Marina
Formato: Articulo
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2016
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Acceso en línea:http://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/86746
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Sumario:The effect of bioaugmentation with <i>Sphingobium</i> sp. AM strain on different soils microbiomes, pristine soil (PS), chronically contaminated soil (IPK) and recently contaminated soil (Phe) and their implications in bioremediation efficiency was studied by focusing on the ecology that drives bacterial communities in response to inoculation. AM strain draft genome codifies genes for metabolism of aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons. In Phe, the inoculation improved the elimination of phenanthrene during the whole treatment, whereas in IPK no improvement of degradation of any PAH was observed. Through the pyrosequencing analysis, we observed that inoculation managed to increase the richness and diversity in both contaminated microbiomes, therefore, independently of PAH degradation improvement, we observed clues of inoculant establishment, suggesting it may use other resources to survive. On the other hand, the inoculation did not influence the bacterial community of PS. On both contaminated microbiomes, incubation conditions produced a sharp increase on <i>Actinomycetales</i> and <i>Sphingomonadales</i> orders, while inoculation caused a relative decline of <i>Actinomycetales</i>. Inoculation of most diverse microbiomes, PS and Phe, produced a coupled increase of <i>Sphingomonadales</i>, <i>Burkholderiales</i> and <i>Rhizobiales</i> orders, although it may exist a synergy between those genera; our results suggest that this would not be directly related to PAH degradation.