The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds

Miscible-displacement experiments were conducted to examine the impact of microbial variables (such as cell growth and metabolic lag) on the biodegradation and transport of salicylate, a model hydrocarbon compound. For each experiment, a soil column was inoculated with bacteria that contained the NA...

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Main Author: Snyder, Susannah Kathleen.
Other Authors: Brusseau, Mark L.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1998
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191381
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1913812015-10-23T04:37:08Z The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds Snyder, Susannah Kathleen. Brusseau, Mark L. Miscible-displacement experiments were conducted to examine the impact of microbial variables (such as cell growth and metabolic lag) on the biodegradation and transport of salicylate, a model hydrocarbon compound. For each experiment, a soil column was inoculated with bacteria that contained the NAH plasmid encoding genes for the degradation of naphthalene and salicylate, and then subjected to a step input of salicylate solution. Oxygen availability, cell growth, and microbial lag were each examined to determine their effect on the characteristic shape of the salicylate breakthrough curve. For all cases examined, the transport behavior of salicylate was nonsteady. While sparging the influent solution with oxygen increased the total amount of salicylate that was degraded in the column, it did not influence the shape of its initial breakthrough behavior. The effect of microbial lag on the shape of the salicylate breakthrough curve was eliminated in a second substrate pulse by exposing the column to two successive pulses of salicylate, thereby allowing the organisms to acclimate to the carbon source during the first pulse. The cause of the lag was further investigated using succinate, a TCA intermediate that was expected to have minimal metabolic lag. Thus, any lag effects would most likely be related to physiological lag. A very slight lag was observed in the succinate breakthrough curve, indicating that physiological lag was minimal in these systems. This implies that metabolic lag is the primary behavior observed in the characteristic nonsteady transport behavior of salicylate. Elimination of microbial lag effects allowed the impact of bacterial growth on salicylate breakthrough to be quantified. 1998 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191381 214411216 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Miscible-displacement experiments were conducted to examine the impact of microbial variables (such as cell growth and metabolic lag) on the biodegradation and transport of salicylate, a model hydrocarbon compound. For each experiment, a soil column was inoculated with bacteria that contained the NAH plasmid encoding genes for the degradation of naphthalene and salicylate, and then subjected to a step input of salicylate solution. Oxygen availability, cell growth, and microbial lag were each examined to determine their effect on the characteristic shape of the salicylate breakthrough curve. For all cases examined, the transport behavior of salicylate was nonsteady. While sparging the influent solution with oxygen increased the total amount of salicylate that was degraded in the column, it did not influence the shape of its initial breakthrough behavior. The effect of microbial lag on the shape of the salicylate breakthrough curve was eliminated in a second substrate pulse by exposing the column to two successive pulses of salicylate, thereby allowing the organisms to acclimate to the carbon source during the first pulse. The cause of the lag was further investigated using succinate, a TCA intermediate that was expected to have minimal metabolic lag. Thus, any lag effects would most likely be related to physiological lag. A very slight lag was observed in the succinate breakthrough curve, indicating that physiological lag was minimal in these systems. This implies that metabolic lag is the primary behavior observed in the characteristic nonsteady transport behavior of salicylate. Elimination of microbial lag effects allowed the impact of bacterial growth on salicylate breakthrough to be quantified.
author2 Brusseau, Mark L.
author_facet Brusseau, Mark L.
Snyder, Susannah Kathleen.
author Snyder, Susannah Kathleen.
spellingShingle Snyder, Susannah Kathleen.
The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds
author_sort Snyder, Susannah Kathleen.
title The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds
title_short The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds
title_full The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds
title_fullStr The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Bacterial Cell Growth and Microbial Lag on the Transport and Biodegradation of Organic Compounds
title_sort impact of bacterial cell growth and microbial lag on the transport and biodegradation of organic compounds
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1998
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191381
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