2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.07.019
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A novel strategy for acetonitrile wastewater treatment by using a recombinant bacterium with biofilm-forming and nitrile-degrading capability

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Cited by 27 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…For example, acetonitrile, a water-soluble substrate that can be converted to toxic hydrogen cyanide in human and animal cells, is a common contaminant in wastewater of the chemical industry (Greenberg, 1999;Robles, 2014). It has been shown that the biofilm-forming strain B. subtilis N4-pHT01-nit strain expressing the Rhodococcus rhodochrous nitrilase Nit was not only resistant to acetonitrile, but it was able to degrade the molecule (most of the added 800 mg l À1 within 24 h; Li et al, 2016b). This approach shows how simple a biotechnological application can be.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, acetonitrile, a water-soluble substrate that can be converted to toxic hydrogen cyanide in human and animal cells, is a common contaminant in wastewater of the chemical industry (Greenberg, 1999;Robles, 2014). It has been shown that the biofilm-forming strain B. subtilis N4-pHT01-nit strain expressing the Rhodococcus rhodochrous nitrilase Nit was not only resistant to acetonitrile, but it was able to degrade the molecule (most of the added 800 mg l À1 within 24 h; Li et al, 2016b). This approach shows how simple a biotechnological application can be.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(A) B. subtilis adhesion and biofilm formation on modified basalt fibers (MBF) bio-carrier for wastewater treatment [ 72 ]. (B) Acetonitrile degrading capability of B. subtilis N4-pHT01-nit after waste water treatment [ 79 ]. (C) Cell growth of B. subtilis N4/pHTnha-ami and organonitriles (acetonitrile, acrylonitrile, crotononitrile) degradation by NHase, amidase and nitrilase genes [ 80 ].…”
Section: Engineered B Subtilis Biofilms For Bioremediationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This genetically engineered strain was constructed by cloning a novel nitrilase ( nit ) gene from bacterium, Rhodococcus rhodochrous BX2 that degrade toxic compound nitrile into a biofilm-forming bacterium B. subtilis N4, displayed recombinant protein upon IPTG induction ( Fig. 4 B) [ 79 ]. Further, Li et al [ 80 ] cloned Nitrile hydratase ( nha ) and amidase ( ami ) genes into the B. subtilis N4 which shows a strong biofilm forming ability and construct a genetically modified B. subtilis N4/pHTnha-ami, which completely degrade organonitriles from the wastewater.…”
Section: Engineered B Subtilis Biofilms For Bioremediationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, the contaminant-degrading bacteria may not be efficiently immobilised in biofilms and may therefore be easily washed out of the system, while the bacteria that create biofilms may not successfully remove pollutants. Additionally, simply mixing biofilm forming bacteria with degrading bacteria may result in mutual growth inhibition, slow biofilm development, difficult operation, and other problems (Li et al, 2016). Both the fixation of functional bacteria in the wastewater treatment system and high-efficiency pollutant removal can be accomplished by the presence of a single bacterial species with the capacity to effectively form biofilms and breakdown pollutants simultaneously.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%