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Molecular and ecological characteristics of carbamate pesticide degrading bacteria : 경작토양에서 분리된 카바메이트 살충제 분해세균의 분자생태학적 특성

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dc.contributor.advisor가종억-
dc.contributor.author김동욱-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-13T08:19:57Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-13T08:19:57Z-
dc.date.issued2014-02-
dc.identifier.other000000017313-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/119453-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 농생명공학부, 2014. 2. 가종억.-
dc.description.abstractCarbamate insecticides, such as carbofuran and fenobucarb, have been widely used to control a variety of pests throughout the world. These insecticides are seldom degraded in soils and have been shown to have toxicity to animals and microorganisms. Hence several studies have focused on the isolation and characterization of carbamate insecticide-degrading microorganisms. In spite of these studies, little information on pathways and genes involved in degradation of carbamate insecticides is available. In this study, Novosphingobium sp. 31B isolated from agricultural soil was observed to degrade fenobucarb through 2-sec-butylphenol and 3-sec-butylcatechol. This is the first report of degradative pathway of fenobucarb. In addition, Sphingobium sp. JE1 was observed to degrade carbofuran through a new pathway, via carbofuran-phenol and 5-hydroxycarbofuran. Sphingobium sp. JE1 had a carbofuran-degradative 220 kb-sized plasmid pJE1 with 229 ORFs and novel catabolic genes. In particular, the transfer-related gene order in the operon was remarkably homologous in carbofuran-degrading bacteria. To determine the interaction between expression of transfer-related genes and degradation of insecticide, quantitative real time PCR analysis was performed. One of the homologous genes, ORF189, was almost relatively four-fold expressed when carbofuran was used as the sole carbon source compared to when glucose was used as the sole carbon source. This results showed that ORF189 may be associated with carbofuran degradation. To identify the genetically-related site of carbofuran degradation in plasmid, the wild type strain JE1 was mutated using the suicide vector pSUP5011. Seven mutated strains could not degrade carbofuran-
dc.description.abstractthese mutants of strain JE1 were each inserted with the Tn5 sequence in plasmid. This indicates that carbofuran-degradation related genes are located in plasmid. Furthermore, changes in utilization patterns of substrate related to carbamate pesticide on seven mutants indicates that the site of Tn5 insertion is not only related the carbofuran but also other carbamate pesticide degradation. In addition, a methyl parathion-degrading bacterium 5N26T was isolated from an agricultural soil cultivated with Chinese cabbage (Brassica campestris L.). Moreover, this strain was a taxonomically novel species of the genus Roseomonas. During the incubation of strain 5N26T in mineral medium containing 50 ppm of methyl parathion as sole carbon source, methyl parathion was converted to 4-nitrophenol. Another methyl parathion-degrading bacterial strain 5G38T was isolated. The novel strain can be distinguished from the other species of the genus Pedobacter by physiological properties. The name Pedobacter namyangjuensis sp. nov. is therefore proposed for strain 5G38T as the type strain. In this study, carbamate insecticide-degradative pathways of Sphingobium sp. and Novosphingobium sp. were characterized, nucleotide sequence of carbofuran degradative plasmid pJE1 was analyzed, and carbofuran degradation-related gene of pJE1, ORF189, was identified. In addition, another pesticide methyl parathion degrading bacteria were proposed as novel species within the genera Roseomonas and Pedobacter.-
dc.description.tableofcontentsCONTENTS


ABSTRACT i
CONTENTS iv
LIST OF TABLES x
LIST OF FIGURES xi


CHAPTER 1. Microbial Degradation of Pesticides: An Introduction 1
I. Bioremediation of contaminated environment 2
II. Genomic application for pesticide bioremediation 6
III. Objectives of this study 11
LITERATURE CITED 13


CHAPTER 2. Characterization of Carbamate Pesticide Degradative Pathway by Novosphingobium sp. 31B and Sphingobium sp. JE1. 19

ABSTRACT 20
INTRODUCTION 22
MATERIALS AND METHODS 24
I. Isolation of bacterial strains 24
II. Chemicals 25
III. Media and culture conditions 25
IV. Phylogenetic analysis by 16S rRNA gene sequence 26
V. Analysis of pesticide degradation by bacteria 29
VI. Chemical analysis and identification of intermediates 30

RESULTS 32
I. Phylogenetic analysis of Novosphingobium sp. 31B and Sphingobium sp. JE1 by 16S rRNA gene sequence 32
II. Biodegradation of pesticide by Novosphingobium sp. 31B and Sphingobium sp. JE1 36
III. Identification of biodegradation intermediates of 2-sec-butylphenyl N-methylcarbamate by Novosphingobium sp. 31B 40
IV. Identification of biodegradation intermediates of 2,3-dihydro-2,2-dimethyl-7-benzofuranyl-N-methylcarbamate by Sphingobium sp. JE1 47

DISCUSSION 56
LITERATURE CITED 59


CHAPTER 3. Genomic Analysis of Carbofuran Degradative Plasmid Harbored in Sphingobium sp. JE1 63

ABSTRACT 64
INTRODUCTION 66
MATERIALS AND METHODS 68
I. Bacterial strains 68
II. Media and culture conditions 68
III. Plasmid DNA extraction 69
IV. Plasmid DNA sequence analysis 70
V. Total RNA isolation and quantitative RT-PCR analysis 71
VI. Tn5 mutagenesis 72
VII. Repetitive extragenic palindromic and kanamycin PCR assay 73
VIII. Degradative phenotype analysis 74

RESULTS 75
I. DNA sequence analysis of plasmid pJE1 by COG 75
II. Genomic homologus region among the related microorganism 94
III. Quantitative real time PCR for determination of carbofuran degradative related genes 113
IV. Tn5 mutagenesis of JE1 by suicide vecter pSUP5011 116

DISCUSSION 121
LITERATURE CITED 126
CHAPTER 4. Description of Two Pesticide-Degrading Bacteria Pedobacter namyangjuensis sp. nov. and Roseomonas soli sp. nov. 130

PART I

ABSTRACT 131
INTRODUCTION 133
MATERIALS AND METHODS 134
I. Isolation of pesticide degrading bacterial strains 134
II. Analysis of pesticide degradation 134
III. Morphological and physiological characteristics 135
IV. Molecular characteristics 136
V. Chemotaxonomic characteristics 137
VI. Deposit site and nucleotide sequence accession number 137

RESULTS 138
I. Analysis of pesticide degradation and morphological and physiological characteristics 138
II. Molecular characteristics 141
III. Chemotaxonomic characteristics 143
IV. Description of Pedobacter namyangjuensis sp. nov. 146

PART II

ABSTRACT 149
INTRODUCTION 150
MATERIALS AND METHODS 152
I. Isolation of pesticide degrading bacterial strains 152
II. Analysis of pesticide degradation and proposed intermediate of methyl parathion 152
III. Morphological and physiological characteristics 154
IV. Molecular characteristics 155
V. Chemotaxonomic characteristics 156
VI. Deposit site and nucleotide sequence accession number 156

RESULTS 157
I. Analysis of pesticide degradation and proposed intermediate of methyl parathion 158
II. Morphological and physiological characteristics 162
III. Molecular characteristics 164
IV. Chemotaxonomic characteristics 166
V. Description of Roseomonas soli sp. nov. 169

DISCUSSION 171
LITERATURE CITED 173
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent4713489 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjectcarbamate-
dc.subjectinsecticide-
dc.subjectcarbofuran-
dc.subjectfenobucarb-
dc.subjectSphingobium sp.-
dc.subjectNovosphingobium sp.-
dc.subjectplasmid-
dc.subjectpesticide-degrading bacteria-
dc.subjectnovel species-
dc.subjectRoseomonas-
dc.subjectPedobacter.-
dc.subject.ddc630-
dc.titleMolecular and ecological characteristics of carbamate pesticide degrading bacteria-
dc.title.alternative경작토양에서 분리된 카바메이트 살충제 분해세균의 분자생태학적 특성-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorDong-uk Kim-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.citation.pages182-
dc.contributor.affiliation농업생명과학대학 농생명공학부-
dc.date.awarded2014-02-
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