Co-reporter:Zhenqiang Zuo;Ting Gong;You Che;Ruihua Liu;Ping Xu;Hong Jiang
Biodegradation 2015 Volume 26( Issue 3) pp:223-233
Publication Date(Web):2015 June
DOI:10.1007/s10532-015-9729-2
Agricultural soils are usually co-contaminated with organophosphate (OP) and pyrethroid pesticides. To develop a stable and marker-free Pseudomonas putida for co-expression of two pesticide-degrading enzymes, we constructed a suicide plasmid with expression cassettes containing a constitutive promoter J23119, an OP-degrading gene (mpd), a pyrethroid-hydrolyzing carboxylesterase gene (pytH) that utilizes the upp gene as a counter-selectable marker for upp-deficient P.putida. By introduction of suicide plasmid and two-step homologous recombination, both mpd and pytH genes were integrated into the chromosome of a robust soil bacterium P. putida KT2440 and no selection marker was left on chromosome. Functional expression of mpd and pytH in P. putida KT2440 was demonstrated by Western blot analysis and enzyme activity assays. Degradation experiments with liquid cultures showed that the mixed pesticides including methyl parathion, fenitrothion, chlorpyrifos, permethrin, fenpropathrin, and cypermethrin (0.2 mM each) were degraded completely within 48 h. The inoculation of engineered strain (106 cells/g) to soils treated with the above mixed pesticides resulted in a higher degradation rate than in noninoculated soils. All six pesticides could be degraded completely within 15 days in fumigated and nonfumigated soils with inoculation. Theses results highlight the potential of the engineered strain to be used for in situ bioremediation of soils co-contaminated with OP and pyrethroid pesticides.
Co-reporter:Hong-Ying Li, Li-Juan Xing, Tong Xu, Peng Wang, Rui-Hua Liu, Bin Wang
Tetrahedron Letters 2013 Volume 54(Issue 8) pp:858-860
Publication Date(Web):20 February 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.tetlet.2012.11.100
An addition of benzylic sp3 C–H to electron-deficient olefins has been developed. This reaction provides a new method for the benzylic C–H bond functionalization of azaarenes without using any catalyst and additives.