4.7 Article

Isolation and characterization of cyromazine degrading Acinetobacter sp. ZX01 from a Chinese ginger cultivated soil

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 45, Pages 67765-67775

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-20538-x

Keywords

Cyromazine; Melamine; Acinetobacter baumannii; Cyromazine degrading bacterium; Antibiotics sensitivity; Bioremediation agent

Funding

  1. National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, and Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea [PJ0140182018]
  2. Research Program for Agricultural Science & Technology Development [PJ0140182018]
  3. National Institute of Agricultural Sciences, and Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea

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In this study, a cyromazine-degrading bacterium (strain ZX01) was isolated and characterized from Chinese ginger cultivated soil. This bacterium showed strong degradation activity towards cyromazine and several other pesticides, making it a potential candidate for the remediation of contaminated soil, water, or crops.
Cyromazine, a symmetrical triazine insecticide, is used to control dipteran larvae in chicken manure by feeding to the poultry, flies on animals, and leafminers in vegetables. Its extensive use has resulted in the widespread contamination in the environment. In the current study, a cyromazine degrading bacterium (designated strain ZX01) was isolated and characterized from a Chinese ginger cultivated soil by selective enrichment culture method. On the basis of morphological, biochemical characteristics, and 16S rRNA gene sequence, this bacterium showed strong similarity to the Pseudomonadales members and was closely related to the Acinetobacter baumannii group. Spectrophotometric and HPLC analyses revealed that strain ZX01 degraded cyromazine and utilized it as the sole carbon source for its growth. This process hydrolyzes cyromazine to melamine. Strain ZX01 degraded most of the cyromazine in 60 h. Besides, its substrate specificity against four symmetrical triazine herbicides, one triazinone herbicide, as well as 10 insecticides and its antibiotic sensitivity towards eight commercial antibiotics were also tested. At the concentration of 100 mu g/mL for 60 h, it could effectively degrade a variety of different pesticides, including atrazine, prometon, simazine, prometryn, enitrothion, diazinon, cypermethrin, and acetamiprid, and the degradation was in the range of 71-87%. In particular, melamine, the main degradation product of cyromazine, was degraded by 47.3%. This microorganism was sensitive to chloramphenicol and tetracycline and intermediate to amoxicillin and trimethoprim. These results highlight that strain ZX01 can be used as a potential biological agent for the remediation of soil, water, or crop contaminated with cyromazine and other symmetrical triazine insecticides.

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