Réjean Beaudet
Université du Québec
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International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1996
B. Bouchard; Réjean Beaudet; Richard Villemur; G. McSWEEN; François Lépine; Jean-Guy Bisaillon
An anaerobic bacterium, strain PCP-1T (T = type strain), which dechlorinates pentachlorophenol (PCP) to 3-chlorophenol, was isolated from a methanogenic consortium. This organism is a spore-forming rod-shaped bacterium that is nonmotile, asaccharolytic, and Gram stain negative but Gram type positive as determined by electron microscopic observations. Inorganic electron acceptors, such as sulfite, thiosulfate, and nitrate (but not sulfate), stimulate growth in the presence of pyruvate and yeast extract. The optimum pH and optimum temperature for growth are 7.5 and 38 degrees C, respectively. The dechlorination pathway is: PCP-->2,3,4,5-tetrachlorophenol -->3,4,5-trichlorophenol-->3,5-dichlorophenol-->3-chlorophenol. This bacterium dechlorinates several different chlorophenols at ortho, meta, and para positions; exceptions to this are 2,3-dichlorophenol, 2,5-dichlorophenol, 3,4-dichlorophenol, and the monochlorophenols. The time course of PCP dechlorination suggests that two enzyme systems are involved in dehalogenation in strain PCP-1T. One system is inducible for ortho dechlorination, and the second system is inducible for meta and para dechlorinations. A 16S rRNA analysis revealed that strain PCP-1T exhibits 95% homology with Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans JW/IU-DC1, an anaerobic bacterium which can dehalogenate chlorophenols only in ortho positions. These results suggest that strain PCP-1T is a member of a new species and belongs to the recently proposed genus Desulfitobacterium. Strain PCP-1T differs from D. dehalogenans JW/IU-DC1 by its broader range of chlorophenol dechlorination. Strain PCP-1 is the type strain of the new species, Desulfitobacterium frappieri.
Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2000
José Marcoux; Eric Déziel; Richard Villemur; François Lépine; Jean-Guy Bisaillon; Réjean Beaudet
A microbial consortium degrading the high‐molecular‐weight polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (HMW PAHs) pyrene, chrysene, benzo[a]pyrene and perylene in a two‐liquid‐phase reactor was studied. The highest PAH‐degrading activity was observed with silicone oil as the water‐immiscible phase; 2,2,4,4,6,8,8‐heptamethylnonane, paraffin oil, hexadecane and corn oil were much less, or not efficient in improving PAH degradation by the consortium. Addition of surfactants (Triton X‐100, Witconol SN70, Brij 35 and rhamnolipids) or Inipol EAP22 did not promote PAH biodegradation. Rhamnolipids had an inhibitory effect. Addition of salicylate, benzoate, 1‐hydroxy‐2‐naphtoic acid or catechol did not increase the PAH‐degrading activity of the consortium, but the addition of low‐molecular‐weight (LMW) PAHs such as naphthalene and phenanthrene did. In these conditions, the degradation rates were 27 mg l−1 d−1 for pyrene, 8·9 mg l−1 d−1 for chrysene, 1·8 mg l−1 d−1 for benzo[a]pyrene and 0·37 mg l−1 d−1 for perylene. Micro‐organisms from the interface were slightly more effective in degrading PAHs than those from the aqueous phase.
Biotechnology Progress | 2000
Richard Villemur; Eric Déziel; Amine Benachenhou; José Marcoux; Emilie Gauthier; François Lépine; Réjean Beaudet; Yves Comeau
High‐molecular‐weight (HMW) polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are pollutants that persist in the environment due to their low solubility in water and their sequestration by soil and sediments. The addition of a water‐immiscible, nonbiodegradable, and biocompatible liquid, silicone oil, to a soil slurry was studied to promote the desorption of PAHs from soil and to increase their bioavailability. First, the transfer into silicone oil of phenanthrene, pyrene, chrysene, and benzo[a]pyrene added to a sterilized soil (sandy soil with 0.65% total volatile solids) was measured for 4 days in three two‐liquid‐phase (TLP) slurry systems each containing 30% (w/v) soil but different volumes of silicone oil (2.5%, 7.5%, and 15% [v/v]). Except for chrysene, a high percentage of these PAHs was transferred from soil to silicone oil in the TLP slurry system containing 15% silicone oil. Rapid PAH transfer occurred during the first 8 h, probably resulting from the extraction of nonsolubilized and of poorly sorbed PAHs. This was followed by a period in which a slower but constant transfer occurred, suggesting extraction of more tightly bound PAHs. Second, a HMW PAH‐degrading consortium was enriched in a TLP slurry system with a microbial population isolated from a creosote‐contaminated soil. This consortium was then added to three other TLP slurry systems each containing 30% (w/v) sterilized soil that had been artificially contaminated with pyrene, chrysene, and benzo[a]pyrene, but different volumes of silicone oil (10%, 20%, and 30% [v/v]). The resulting TLP slurry bioreactors were much more efficient than the control slurry bioreactor containing the same contaminated soil but no oil phase. In the TLP slurry bioreactor containing 30% silicone oil, the rate of pyrene degradation was 19 mg L−1 day−1 and no pyrene was detected after 4 days. The degradation rates of chrysene and benzo[a]pyrene in the 30% TLP slurry bioreactor were, respectively, 3.5 and 0.94 mg L−1 day−1. Low degradation of pyrene and no significant degradation of chrysene and benzo[a]pyrene occurred in the slurry bioreactor. This is the first report in which a TLP system was combined with a slurry system to improve the biodegradation of PAHs in soil.
Microbial Ecology | 2009
Isabelle Lafortune; Pierre Juteau; Eric Déziel; François Lépine; Réjean Beaudet; Richard Villemur
High-molecular-weight (HMW) polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are pollutants that persist in the environment due to their low solubility in water and their sequestration by soil and sediments. Although several PAH-degrading bacterial species have been isolated, it is not expected that a single isolate would exhibit the ability to degrade completely all PAHs. A consortium composed of different microorganisms can better achieve this. Two-liquid phase (TLP) culture systems have been developed to increase the bioavailability of poorly soluble substrates for uptake and biodegradation by microorganisms. By combining a silicone oil–water TLP system with a microbial consortium capable of degrading HMW PAHs, we previously developed a highly efficient PAH-degrading system. In this report, we characterized the bacterial diversity of the consortium with a combination of culture-dependent and culture-independent methods. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of part of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) sequences combined with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis was used to monitor the bacterial population changes during PAH degradation of the consortium when pyrene, chrysene, and benzo[a]pyrene were provided together or separately in the TLP cultures. No substantial changes in bacterial profiles occurred during biodegradation of pyrene and chrysene in these cultures. However, the addition of the low-molecular-weight PAHs phenanthrene or naphthalene in the system favored one bacterial species related to Sphingobium yanoikuyae. Eleven bacterial strains were isolated from the consortium but, interestingly, only one—IAFILS9 affiliated to Novosphingobium pentaromativorans—was capable of growing on pyrene and chrysene as sole source of carbon. A 16S rDNA library was derived from the consortium to identify noncultured bacteria. Among 86 clones screened, 20 were affiliated to different bacterial species–genera. Only three strains were represented in the screened clones. Eighty-five percent of clones and strains were affiliated to Alphaproteobacteria and Betaproteobacteria; among them, several were affiliated to bacterial species known for their PAH degradation activities such as those belonging to the Sphingomonadaceae. Finally, three genes involved in the degradation of aromatic molecules were detected in the consortium and two in IAFILS9. This study provides information on the bacterial composition of a HWM PAH-degrading consortium and its dynamics in a TLP biosystem during PAH degradation.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1997
Marie-Josée Lévesque; Sylvie La Boissière; Jean-Christophe Thomas; Réjean Beaudet; Richard Villemur
Abstract A rapid method was developed for detecting in soil Desulfitobacterium frappieri strain PCP-1, an anaerobic gram-positive bacterium, isolated from a methanogenic consortium degrading pentachlorophenol. The method involved the establishment of a protocol for extracting total DNA from soil with the least contamination, and the use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to detect strain PCP-1 with primers targeted with PCP-1 16S rRNA. To optimize the DNA extraction conditions, a glass mill homogenizer and a low-salt buffer containing polyvinylpolypyrrolidone were used on a black soil rich in organic matter. Recovered DNA was further purified with phenol/chloroform extractions, ammonium acetate precipitation and a G200 Sephadex gel-filtration column. DNA was extracted from soil supplemented with different concentrations of PCP-1 cells. Detection of PCP-1 was by PCR. The limit of detection was 800 added PCP-1 cells/g dry soil. This level of detection was achieved when the T4 gene-32 protein and 1 μg soil DNA were added to the PCR mixture followed by a nested PCR. This method is quick, sensitive, and can process several samples at the same time.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2004
Pierre Juteau; D. Tremblay; Richard Villemur; Jean-Guy Bisaillon; Réjean Beaudet
The microflora of a self-heating aerobic thermophilic sequencing batch reactor (AT-SBR) treating swine waste was investigated by a combination of culture and culture-independent techniques. The temperature increased quickly in the first hours of the treatment cycles and values up to 72°C were reached. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of the PCR-amplified V3 region of 16S rDNA (PCR-DGGE) revealed important changes in the bacterial community during 3-day cycles. A clone library was constructed with the near-full-length 16S rDNA amplified from a mixed-liquor sample taken at 60°C. Among the 78 non-chimeric clones analysed, 20 species (here defined as clones showing more than 97% sequence homology) were found. In contrast to other culture-independent bacterial analyses of aerobic thermophilic wastewater treatments, species belonging to the Bacilli class were dominant (64%) with Bacillus thermocloacae being the most abundant species (38%). The other Bacilli could not be assigned to a known species. Schineria larvae was the second most abundant species (14%) in the clone library. Four species were also found among the 19 strains isolated, cultivated and identified from samples taken at 40°C and 60°C. Ten isolates showed high 16S rDNA sequence homology with the dominant bacterium of a composting process that had not been previously isolated.The microflora of a self-heating aerobic thermophilic sequencing batch reactor (AT-SBR) treating swine waste was investigated by a combination of culture and culture-independent techniques. The temperature increased quickly in the first hours of the treatment cycles and values up to 72°C were reached. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of the PCR-amplified V3 region of 16S rDNA (PCR-DGGE) revealed important changes in the bacterial community during 3-day cycles. A clone library was constructed with the near-full-length 16S rDNA amplified from a mixed-liquor sample taken at 60°C. Among the 78 non-chimeric clones analysed, 20 species (here defined as clones showing more than 97% sequence homology) were found. In contrast to other culture-independent bacterial analyses of aerobic thermophilic wastewater treatments, species belonging to the Bacilli class were dominant (64%) with Bacillus thermocloacae being the most abundant species (38%). The other Bacilli could not be assigned to a known species. Schineria larvae was the second most abundant species (14%) in the clone library. Four species were also found among the 19 strains isolated, cultivated and identified from samples taken at 40°C and 60°C. Ten isolates showed high 16S rDNA sequence homology with the dominant bacterium of a composting process that had not been previously isolated.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004
Jacinthe Thibodeau; Annie Gauthier; Marie Duguay; Richard Villemur; François Lépine; Pierre Juteau; Réjean Beaudet
ABSTRACT A membrane-associated 3,5-dichlorophenol reductive dehalogenase was isolated from Desulfitobacterium frappieri PCP-1. The highest dehalogenase activity was observed with the biomass cultured at 22°C, compared to 30 and 37°C, where the cell suspensions were 2.2 and 9.6 times less active, respectively. The reductive dehalogenase was purified 12.7-fold to apparent homogeneity. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed a single band with an apparent molecular mass of 57 kDa. Its dechlorinating activity was not inhibited by sulfate and nitrate but was completely inhibited by 2.5 mM sulfite and 10 mM KCN. A mixture of iodopropane and titanium citrate caused a light-reversible inhibition of the dechlorinating activities, suggesting the involvement of a corrinoid cofactor. Several polychlorophenols were dechlorinated at the meta and para positions. The apparent Km for 3,5-dicholorophenol was 49.3 ± 3.1 μM at a methyl viologen concentration of 2 mM. Six internal tryptic peptides were sequenced by mass spectrometry. One open reading frame (ORF) was found in the Desulfitobacterium hafniense genome containing these peptide sequences. This ORF corresponds to a gene coding for a CprA-type reductive dehalogenase. The corresponding ORF (named cprA5) in D. frappieri PCP-1 was cloned and sequenced. The cprA5 gene codes for a 548-amino-acid protein that contains a twin-arginine-type signal for secretion. The gene product has a cobalamin binding site motif and two iron-sulfur binding motifs and shows 66% identity (76 to 77% similarity) with some tetrachloroethene reductive dehalogenases. This is the first CprA-type reductive dehalogenase that can dechlorinate chlorophenols at the meta and para positions.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001
Nelly Valkova; François Lépine; Loredana Valeanu; Maryse Dupont; Louisette Labrie; Jean-Guy Bisaillon; Réjean Beaudet; François Shareck; Richard Villemur
ABSTRACT Enterobacter cloacae strain EM was isolated from a commercial dietary mineral supplement stabilized by a mixture of methylparaben and propylparaben. It harbored a high-molecular-weight plasmid and was resistant to high concentrations of parabens. Strain EM was able to grow in liquid media containing similar amounts of parabens as found in the mineral supplement (1,700 and 180 mg of methyl and propylparaben, respectively, per liter or 11.2 and 1.0 mM) and in very high concentrations of methylparaben (3,000 mg liter−1, or 19.7 mM). This strain was able to hydrolyze approximately 500 mg of methyl-, ethyl-, or propylparaben liter−1 (3 mM) in less than 2 h in liquid culture, and the supernatant of a sonicated culture, after a 30-fold dilution, was able to hydrolyze 1,000 mg of methylparaben liter−1 (6.6 mM) in 15 min. The first step of paraben degradation was the hydrolysis of the ester bond to produce 4-hydroxybenzoic acid, followed by a decarboxylation step to produce phenol under aerobic conditions. The transformation of 4-hydroxybenzoic acid into phenol was stoichiometric. The conversion of approximately 500 mg of parabens liter−1 (3 mM) to phenol in liquid culture was completed within 5 h without significant hindrance to the growth of strain EM, while higher concentrations of parabens partially inhibited its growth.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1995
Pierre Juteau; Réjean Beaudet; G. McSween; François Lépine; Sylvain Milot; Jean-Guy Bisaillon
An anaerobic consortium degrading pentachlorophenol (PCP) by methanogenic fermentation was enriched from PCP-contaminated soils. In a semi-continuous reactor, PCP biodegradation was unstable and necessitated periodic additions of unacclimated anaerobic sludge waste to restore the activity. In continuous-flow reactors, PCP degradation activity was more stable when a mixture of glucose and sodium formate was used as secondary carbon source instead of glucose. The analysis of the chlorophenol intermediates suggested that the main pathway of PCP dechlorination was PCP → 2,3,5,6-tetrachlorophenol → 2,3,5-trichlorophenol → 3,5-dichlorophenol → 3-chlorophenol → phenol. In a laboratory-scale continuous-upflow fixed-film column reactor, a PCP removal of more than 99% was achieved at a PCP loading rate of 60 μmol (1 reactor volume)−1 day−1 for a hydraulic retention time of 0.7 day. Analysis of culture samples taken at different levels in the reactor have shown that, at this PCP loading rate, only the lower part of the reactor was active. 3-chlorophenol and 3,5- and 3,4-dichlorophenol were detected at the different levels of the reactor. A study of the microorganisms in the biofilm was carried out by scanning electron microscopy and suggested that the microorganisms involved in the consortium were present as a well-structured arrangement. Methanosaeta-like microorganisms were observed mainly at the base of the biofilm whereas, at the surface, a larger diversity of morphotypes was observed in which coccoid or small rod organisms were dominant. This work shows the importance of the design and the control of the operation parameters on the efficiency of the fixed-film reactor.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005
M. Lanthier; Pierre Juteau; François Lépine; Réjean Beaudet; Richard Villemur
ABSTRACT We developed a pentachlorophenol (PCP)-degrading, methanogenic fixed-film reactor by using broken granular sludge from an upflow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor. This methanogenic consortium was acclimated with increasing concentrations of PCP. After 225 days of acclimation, the reactor was performing at a high level, with a PCP removal rate of 1,173 μM day−1, a PCP removal efficiency of up to 99%, a degradation efficiency of approximately 60%, and 3-chlorophenol as the main chlorophenol residual intermediate. Analyses by PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) showed that Bacteria and Archaea in the reactor stabilized in the biofilms after 56 days of operation. Important modifications in the profiles of Bacteria between the original granular sludge and the reactor occurred, as less than one-third of the sludge DGGE bands were still present in the reactor. Fluorescence in situ hybridization experiments with probes for Archaea or Bacteria revealed that the biofilms were composed mostly of Bacteria, which accounted for 70% of the cells. With PCR species-specific primers, the presence of the halorespiring bacterium Desulfitobacterium hafniense in the biofilm was detected very early during the reactor acclimation period. D. hafniense cells were scattered in the biofilm and accounted for 19% of the community. These results suggest that the presence of PCP-dehalogenating D. hafniense in the biofilm was crucial for the performance of the reactor.