Complementary Biotransformation of Antimicrobial Triclocarban Obviously Mitigates Nitrous Oxide Emission toward Sustainable Microbial Denitrification.
Liying ZhangXiaodan MaQian LiHanlin CuiKe ShiHao WangYanqing ZhangShu-Hong GaoZhiling LiAi-Jie WangBin LiangPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
Sustainable nitrogen cycle is an essential biogeochemical process that ensures ecosystem safety and byproduct greenhouse gas nitrous oxide reduction. Antimicrobials are always co-occurring with anthropogenic reactive nitrogen sources. However, their impacts on the ecological safety of microbial nitrogen cycle remain poorly understood. Here, a denitrifying bacterial strain Paracoccus denitrificans PD1222 was exposed to a widespread broad-spectrum antimicrobial triclocarban (TCC) at environmental concentrations. The denitrification was hindered by TCC at 25 μg L -1 and was completely inhibited once the TCC concentration exceeded 50 μg L -1 . Importantly, the accumulation of N 2 O at 25 μg L -1 of TCC was 813 times as much as the control group without TCC, which attributed to the significantly downregulated expression of nitrous oxide reductase and the genes related to electron transfer, iron, and sulfur metabolism under TCC stress. Interestingly, combining TCC-degrading denitrifying Ochrobactrum sp. TCC-2 with strain PD1222 promoted the denitrification process and mitigated N 2 O emission by 2 orders of magnitude. We further consolidated the importance of complementary detoxification by introducing a TCC-hydrolyzing amidase gene tcc A from strain TCC-2 into strain PD1222, which successfully protected strain PD1222 against the TCC stress. This study highlights an important link between TCC detoxification and sustainable denitrification and suggests a necessity to assess the ecological risks of antimicrobials in the context of climate change and ecosystem safety.