Environmental Science and Engineering Seminar
Compound specific isotope analysis (CSIA) has been used as a monitoring tool to assess the biodegradation of various organic contaminants. We report a novel analytical method for determining the enrichment of 13C in 1,4-dioxane, and kinetic carbon isotopic fractionation factor (E) according to Rayleigh model. This method was successfully applied for monitoring biodegradation of 1,4-dioxane in microcosms constructed using biomass and groundwater collected from a 1,4-dioxane-contaminated site.
Pseudonocardia dioxanivorans, which can grow using dioxane as its only source of carbon and energy, was isolated and characterized in our previous work. The role of monooxygenase enzymes in catalyzing dioxane degradation was confirmed using several independent lines of evidence, and biochemical degradation pathway was described. Recently, the genome of P. dioxanivorans, assembled and annotated in collaboration with UC Berkeley and DOE Joint Genome Institute, revealed multiple monooxygenase genes. We are now developing molecular biological probes targeting monooxygenase genes to serve as monitoring tools for 1,4-dioxane bioremediation in contaminated environments.