Dual Carbon–Chlorine Isotope Analysis Indicates Distinct Anaerobic Dichloromethane Degradation Pathways in Two Members of Peptococcaceae
Author(s) -
Gao Chen,
Orfan ShouakarStash,
Elizabeth Phillips,
Shandra D. Justicia-Leon,
Tetyana Gilevska,
Barbara Sherwood Lollar,
E. Erin Mack,
Edward S. Seger,
Frank E. Löffler
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.8b01583
Subject(s) - chemistry , chlorine , dichloromethane , environmental chemistry , isotope fractionation , isotope analysis , formate , carbon fibers , fractionation , isotopes of carbon , total organic carbon , organic chemistry , solvent , biology , ecology , materials science , composite number , composite material , catalysis
Dichloromethane (DCM) is a probable human carcinogen and frequent groundwater contaminant and contributes to stratospheric ozone layer depletion. DCM is degraded by aerobes harboring glutathione-dependent DCM dehalogenases; however, DCM contamination occurs in oxygen-deprived environments, and much less is known about anaerobic DCM metabolism. Some members of the Peptococcaceae family convert DCM to environmentally benign products including acetate, formate, hydrogen (H 2 ), and inorganic chloride under strictly anoxic conditions. The current study applied stable carbon and chlorine isotope fractionation measurements to the axenic culture Dehalobacterium formicoaceticum and to the consortium RM comprising DCM degrader Candidatus Dichloromethanomonas elyunquensis. Degradation-associated carbon and chlorine isotope enrichment factors (ε C and ε Cl ) of -42.4 ± 0.7‰ and -5.3 ± 0.1‰, respectively, were measured in D. formicoaceticum cultures. A similar ε Cl of -5.2 ± 0.1‰, but a substantially lower ε C of -18.3 ± 0.2‰, were determined for Ca. Dichloromethanomonas elyunquensis. The ε C and ε Cl values resulted in distinctly different dual element C-Cl isotope correlations (Λ C/Cl = Δδ 13 C/Δδ 37 Cl) of 7.89 ± 0.12 and 3.40 ± 0.03 for D. formicoaceticum and Ca. Dichloromethanomonas elyunquensis, respectively. The distinct Λ C/Cl values obtained for the two cultures imply mechanistically distinct C-Cl bond cleavage reactions, suggesting that members of Peptococcaceae employ different pathways to metabolize DCM. These findings emphasize the utility of dual carbon-chlorine isotope analysis to pinpoint DCM degradation mechanisms and to provide an additional line of evidence that detoxification is occurring at DCM-contaminated sites.
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