Aerobic Biotransformation of Gasoline Aromatics in MultiComponent Mixtures

Abstract
The primary objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of substrate interactions on the biotransformation rates and mineralization potentials of gasoline monoaromatics and methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), compounds that commonly co-exist in groundwater contaminant plumes. A mixed culture was derived from gasoline-contaminated aquifer material using toluene as the enrichment substrate. Two pure cultures, Rhodococcus sp. RR1 and RR2, were isolated from the mixed culture. The three toluene-grown cultures were shown to biotransform all of the six BTEX compounds (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, o-xylene, m-xylene, and p-xylene), both individually and in mixtures, over a broad range of concentrations. The mixed culture was shown to degrade all of the BTEX compounds to 14CO2, while the two isolates mineralized BTE(m-/p-)X, but biotransformed o-xylene without production of carbon dioxide. Studies to evaluate substrate interactions caused by the concurrent presence of multiple BTEX compounds during their biodegradation revealed a number of patterns,including competitive inhibition and cometabolism. Ethylbenzene was shown to significantly inhibit BTX degradation in mixtures. MTBE was not biodegraded by any of the three toluene-grown cultures over a range of MTBE concentrations. Furthermore, the presence of MTBE at concentrations of 2 to 100 mg/L had no effect on BTEX biotransformation rates.