PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Mineralization of acephate, a recalcitrant organophosphate insecticide is initiated by a pseudomonad in environmental samples.

  • Aleem Basha Pinjari,
  • Boris Novikov,
  • Yohannes H Rezenom,
  • David H Russell,
  • Melinda E Wales,
  • Dayananda Siddavattam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0031963
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 4
p. e31963

Abstract

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An aerobic bacterium capable of breaking down the pesticide acephate (O,S-dimethyl acetyl phosphoramidothioic acid) was isolated from activated sludge collected from a pesticide manufacturing facility. A phylogenetic tree based on the 16 S rRNA gene sequence determined that the isolate lies within the Pseudomonads. The isolate was able to grow in the presence of acephate at concentrations up to 80 mM, with maximum growth at 40 mM. HPLC and LC-MS/MS analysis of spent medium from growth experiments and a resting cell assay detected the accumulation of methamidophos and acetate, suggesting initial hydrolysis of the amide linkage found between these two moieties. As expected, the rapid decline in acephate was coincident with the accumulation of methamidophos. Methamidophos concentrations were maintained over a period of days, without evidence of further metabolism or cell growth by the cultures. Considering this limitation, strains such as described in this work can promote the first step of acephate mineralization in soil microbial communities.