Models for the kinetics of biodegradation of organic compounds not supporting growth
- 1 August 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 50 (2), 323-331
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.50.2.323-331.1985
Abstract
We developed 12 models of kinetics to describe the metabolism of organic substrates that are not supporting bacterial growth. These models can be used to describe the biodegradation of organic compounds that are not supporting growth when the responsible populations are growing logistically, logarithmically, or linearly or are not increasing in numbers. Nonlinear regression analysis was used to fit patterns of mineralization by two bacteria to these kinetic models. Pseudomonas acidovorans mineralized 1 ng of phenol per ml while growing exponentially at the expense of uncharacterized organic carbon in a synthetic medium. Phenol at a concentration of 1 ng/ml did not affect the growth of P. acidovorans. These data were best fit by the model that incorporates the equation for logarithmic growth and assumes a concentration of test substrate well below its Km value. In the absence of a second substrate, glucose at concentrations below those supporting growth was mineralized by Salmonella typhimurium in a manner best described by pseudo first-order kinetics. In the presence of different concentrations of arabinose, however, the kinetics of glucose mineralization by S. typhimurium reflected linear, logistic, or logarithmic growth of the population on arabinose. We conclude that the kinetics of mineralization of organic compounds at concentrations too low to support growth are best described either by the first-order model or by models that incorporate expressions for the kinetics of growth of the metabolizing population on other substrates. When growth is at the expense of other substrates, the kinetics observed reflect such growth, as well as the concentration of the substrate of interest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
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