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Bioremediation by means of plants and genetically modified bacteria
 | Colonisation studies of alfalfa (Medicago sativa) by the bacterial strain Pseudomonas
fluorescens F113rifpcb indicate that the strain can colonise this plant at a level of
105 cfu/g to 106 cfu/g root (fresh weight), and will constitute up
to 10% of the total aerobic bacterial rhizosphere population. |
 | Colonisation of alfalfa roots using beads (alginate encapsulated Pseudomonas
fluorescens F113rifpcb) was found to be the most efficient way of introducing the
inoculant into non-sterile soil microcosms. Different encapsulation formulations have been
shown to optimise the release of the genetically modified microorganisms to soil over
time. |
 | Left and right distal regions of the bph cassette were sequenced, and DNA
sequence information allowed the design of PCR primer pairs that can be used to amplify a
unique amplicon, indicative of this DNA module, which can be used to track the recombinant
insert in Pseudomonas fluorescens F113rifpcb. A method was developed using real
time PCR methods for the detection and quantification of strain F113rifpcb and its
recombinant genes. |
 | A similar quantitative assay was developed for strain lacZY, based on a unique sequence
in the junction between the inserted cassette and the wildtype chromosome. |
 | A major objective of the project was to place the bph degradation genes under the
control of exudate/environment inducible promoters. A model plasmid to assess an iron
regulated promoter from Pseudomonas sp. strain M114 was constructed and evaluated. |
 | Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 derivatives have been constructed with re-regulated bph
pathways. Constructs with pNODD4 and pEX promoters located in the 5'
region of the bph cassette have been evaluated for growth on biphenyl and gene
expression in vitro. These strains have also been evaluated for colonisation of alfalfa
roots in non-sterile soil microcosms. |
 | A goal of the project was to develop inoculants with limited persistence (contained
strains). A regulatory gene of secondary metabolites was targeted as a key gene required
for the long term survival of Pseudomonas in soil. |
 | Pex fusions to this regulatory gene have been constructed and tested, showing the
feasibility of a biological containment system based on root exudate-induced expression of
gacA. |
 | A specific carrier is found suitable for application of strain Pseudomonas
fluorescens F113 on cuttings as well as on seeds. |
 | A protocol for easy surface sterilisation of willow was developed, as is the hydroponic
sterile culture system of this tree species. This gives basis for more precise
measurements and comparison studies of different bacteria used for rhizoremediation in
combination with this promising plant species. |
 | Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 is able to colonise and establish in the rhizosphere
and bulk soil of willow. Over several months, the abundance of Pseudomonas fluorescens F113
remained higher in the willow rhizosphere than in the bulk soil. Killing the plants with a
herbicide showed that the strain was able to survive on the decaying roots and
re-establish on new willow roots emerging in the same soil. |
 | A genetically modified strain of Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 harbouring the bph-genes
had a potential to degrade biphenyl and some PCB congeners to CO2. Probably,
the low degradation rate was due to the fact that no extra C-source was added to the
medium, allowing the degradation to be cometabolic. |
 | We were unable to detect improved degradation of 4-PCB in the soil as an effect of the
inoculated Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 bacteria with bph-genes. One reason
for this could be a low activity of the inoculated strain in the rhizosphere. As the
bph-genes are expressed constitutively, the expression is decreased when strain F113 was
not growing actively. The soil analyses clearly showed that 4-PCB disappearance was due to
uptake by the willow roots. This was verified by extraction of the willow plants, as 4-PCB
was recovered mainly from the shoots. |
 | Reporter constructs of Pseudomonas fluorescens F113 with the stable variant of gfp
were used as an indicator of the localisation of strain F113 at the root of alfalfa. CLSM
studies showed the inoculated strain to be present along the entire roots of alfalfa. The
strain colonised the rhizoplane, often in the intercellular caves between plant cells, the
mucigel, root tip and root hairs. No effect of adding 4-PCB to the soil was found on the
colonisation patterns. No toxic or selective effect was found of not having or having the
degradation genes. This is consistent with the low activity of the bacteria located at the
rhizoplane. |
 | Reporter constructs with the unstable variants of gfps (gfpAGA and gfpAAV)
driven by the ribosomal promoter were shown to be reporters of the gene expression of
introduced cells in the rhizosphere, in that the expression was strongly dependent upon
the growth rate. The CLSM studies showed that only bacteria located at the root tip or at
sites for lateral root emergence expressed fluorescence from the two unstable variants of
gfps. This indicate that only cells at the root tip or at lateral root emergence sites are
able to maintain a certain activity based upon the leakage of exudates, and that cells
located here have a higher activity than cells located elsewhere at the root. However, the
missing expression from unstable gfps does not necessarily imply starvation or no
activity, as the promoter can be active at levels below gfp detection. |
 | The pm promoter was shown to be inducible by chlorobenzoates, which are degradation
products from the degradation of PCB in Pseudomonas fluorescens F113rifpcb. Pure
culture experiments showed that the induction and expression of gfp start within a few
minutes, and that the concentration needed for gfp expression and fluorescence at single
cell level is low. This together makes F113Pm::gfp constructs suitable reporters for the
degradation of 3-PCB in the rhizosphere of alfalfa. CLSM studies showed that Pseudomonas
fluorescens F113rifpcb was able to degrade 3-PCB in the rhizosphere of alfalfa.
However, these studies showed that even though the introduced strain colonised the entire
root, only a minor fraction of the cells was degrading at a rate sufficient to be
visualised in CLSM. In these present experiments, the rhizodegradation was shown to occur
when using the 3-CBA inducible pm promoter and stable gfp as a marker. However, when using
the pm promoter combined with unstable gfp, no induced fluorescence was seen, indicating a
low degradation rate of the xenobiotic. This is supported by the fact that we showed that
the addition of PCB did not lead to a higher number of culturable cells in the rhizosphere
of the PCB-degrading strain. |
 | Probably, the explanation for the missing measurable degradation of 4-PCB in the soil
microcosms experiments is that only a small fraction of the introduced cells remained
active and that the degradation rate was too slow to be measurable within the time of the
experiment. Also, uptake by the willow was found to be an effective competitor for the
available PCB to Pseudomonas fluorescens F113rifpcb. The conditions for a
successful rhizodegradation were found to be present, as Pseudomonas fluorescens
F113rifpcb colonises the rhizosphere and is able to degrade PCBs in pure culture. |
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