Research Brief 139:  MTBE Biodegradation by Methylibium petroleiphilum gen. nov, sp. nov., a methylotroph of the Betaproteobacteria (formerly known as PM-1)

 

Background:  Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) has been used in gasoline in the United Stated since 1979 – first as a replacement for tetra-ethyl lead to increase octane ratings and then at higher concentrations in response to the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, which required the use of oxygenated gasoline in air quality non-attainment regions.  By the mid-1990's, MTBE was in the gasoline supplies in many major metropolitan areas, with California and New York accounting for 40% of U.S. MTBE consumption. 

 

MTBE quickly became the second most commonly observed contaminant in ground waters and threatened public water supplies because of:

·        widespread use

·        releases from leaking underground storage tanks

·        distinctive physico-chemical properties compared to other gasoline components  (e.g., greater solubility; lower Henry's partition coefficient from water to air; lower sorption partition coefficient; remarkably low taste and odor thresholds)

·        apparent recalcitrance to biodegradation.

MTBE was listed on the CERCLA Priority List of Hazardous Substances in 1997.  As of September 2005, use of MTBE has been banned in 25 states, yet site clean-up costs are estimated in the billion-dollar range (http://www.aehs.com/press/MTBECleanup.htm) and drinking water treatment costs in the tens of billions of dollars (http://www.awwa.org/Communications/news/index.cfm?ArticleID=459). 

 

Over the past decade, SBRP-funded researchers at the University of California, Davis led by Drs. Kate Scow, Krassi Hristova, Doug Mackay, Dan Chang and Ed Schroeder have cultured and studied a novel, robust, naturally occurring strain of bacteria that is capable of aerobic mineralization of MTBE, its degradation byproduct tertiary butyl alcohol (TBA) and other gasoline components.  The researchers discovered a mixed culture that serendipitously degraded air contaminated with MTBE in a biofilter located at the County Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles' Joint Water Pollution Control Plant (JWPCP) in Carson, CA in 1995.  (As a side note, the biofiltration technology was introduced at the JWPCP in 1991 for VOC control by UC-Davis SBRP-funded graduate student Sarina Ergas). Soon, Juana Eweis from the Chang/Schroeder lab found conditions suitable for growing the MTBE-degrading mixed culture from the compost within the biofilter, and Jessica Hanson from the Scow lab subsequently isolated a single strain known as PM-1. 

 

Advances:  Focusing on use of the mixed culture containing the PM-1, the Chang/Schroeder group concentrated on applications of technologies that could be deployed quickly for ex situ pump-and-treat applications or contaminated air from air-stripping or soil vapor extraction treatments.  Teaming with a small business concern, the Chang/Schroeder group tested a pilot-scale unit in the field treating MTBE-contaminated water at a site in Healdsburg, CA by 1999.  Subsequently, they conducted a USEPA Phase I SBIR effort with Environmental Resolutions, Inc. (ERI) to design a fluidized sand-bed bioreactor to retain mixed cultures, including the relatively slow-growing PM-1 organism, in the reactor.  Over 30 successful bioreactors in California and in New England have been installed and ERI now deliver units for operation either by ERI or by the site-owner.

 

Concurrently, the UC-Davis researchers conducted in situ biostimulation and bioaugmentation studies at Port Hueneme and Vandenberg Air Force Base.  With the development of molecular tools for identifying the PM-1 organism, they determined that the organism's occurrence is more widespread than was initially imagined.  In fact biostimulation (e.g., providing sufficient dissolved oxygen in the groundwater) enabled the native PM-1 organisms in groundwater aquifers to biodegrade MTBE in several cases.  Bioaugmentation with PM-1 appears to be justified only when the strain is not already present, which can now readily be determined.  The Regenesis Company, which manufactures an oxygen-release compound, has licensed use of the organism for in situ bioremediation.

 

Researchers working with Drs. Hristova and Scow, in collaboration with other research groups, have focused on establishing a better scientific understanding of the PM-1 organism itself, a necessary step for verification of the success of in situ applications. The research team recently determined the entire genome sequence of PM-1, now officially a new species of Betaproteobacteria named Methylibium petroleiphilum PM1.

 

Significance:  Knowledge of the genome will allow researchers to determine the activity of the laboratory strain of M. petroleiphilum or a naturally occurring close relative present at field sites, and determine which is responsible for MTBE and TBA biodegradation.  Knowledge of the genome will ultimately permit identification of the genes responsible for the enzymatic activity of the organism on MTBE, possibly leading to a better understanding of the environmental controls on the process.  Knowledge of the MTBE degradation pathway and its regulation will allow for optimization of MTBE bioremediation and the ability to monitor this unique process in situ using state-of-the-art molecular tools.

 

Substantial cost savings for site clean-ups have already been made possible for ex situ pump-and-treat operations.  The technology is considered innovative in EPA Region I.
See: http://www.epa.gov/region1/assistance/ceit_iti/tech_cos/ERIBioreactor.html 

 

Although the microorganism is non-pathogenic, its potential to reduce drinking water treatment costs has not yet been fully exploited.  Industry acceptance has been slow, in part because of reluctance to employ biological treatment of drinking water supplies although microorganisms are known to colonize granular activated carbon that is already often used for treating drinking water supplies.

 

For More Information Contact:

 

Kate M. Scow, Ph.D.

University of California, Davis

Department of Land, Air and Water Resources

Davis, CA 95616-5294

Phone: 530-754-9668

Email: kmscow@ucdavis.edu

 

Krassimira Hristrova, Ph.D.

University of California, Davis

Department of Land, Air and Water Resources

Davis, CA 95616-5294

Phone: 530-752-2412

Email: krhristova@ucdavis.edu

 

Daniel P.Y. Chang, Ph.D.

University of California, Davis

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Davis, CA 95616-5294

Phone: 530-752-2537

Email: dpchang@ucdavis.edu 

 

To learn more about this research, please refer to:

 

Nakatsu, C.H.; Hristova, K.R.; Hanada, S.; Meng, X.-Y.; Hanson, J.R.; Scow, K.M.;

Kamagata, Y. (2006)  "Methylobium petroleophilum PM1 gen. nov., sp. nov., a new methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) degrading methylotroph belonging to the beta-subclass of the Proteobacteria." Int. J. Sys. Evol. Microbiol. 56: 983-989.

 

Smith, A.E.; Hristova, K.; Wood, I.; Mackay, D.M.; Lory, E. Lorenzana, D.; Scow, K.M. (2005).  "Comparison of Biostimulation versus Bioaugmentation with Bacterial Strain PM1 for Treatment of Groundwater Contaminated with Methyl Tertiary Butyl Ether (MTBE)."  Environmental Health Perspectives, 113(3): 317-322.

 

Davis-Hoover, W.J.; Stavnes, S.A.; Fleischman, J.J.; Hristova, K.R.;  Scow, K.M.; Goetz, J.; Kemper M.; Knutson, K.; Mahaffey, W.R.;  Slomczynski, D.J.; Feldhake, D. (2004).  "Microbial Analysis of MTBE, BTEX Bioremediation: BionetsTM Containing PM1, SOS, Isolite." Battelle Press, Columbus, OH.

 

Feris, K.P.; Hristova, K.; Gebreyesus, B.; Mackay, D.; Scow, K.M. (2004). "A Shallow BTEX and MTBE Contaminated Aquifer Supports a Diverse Microbial Community."  Microbial Ecology, 48: 589–600.

 

Hristova, K.R.; Gerbreyesus. B.; Mackay, D.; Scow, K.M. (2003). "MTBE-Degrading Bacterium, Strain PM1, Is Naturally Occurring in MTBE Contaminated Aquifers." Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 69(5): 2616-2623.

 

Gray, J.R.; Lacrampe-Couloume, G.; Gandhi, D.; Scow, K.M.; Wilson, R.D.; Mackay, D.M.; Lollar, B.S. (2002).  "Carbon and Hydrogen Isotopic Fractionation during Biodegradation of Methyl tert-Butyl Ether." Environ. Sci. Technol., 36: 1931-1938.

 

Hristova, K.R.;  Lutenegger, C.M.; Scow, K.M. (2001).  "Detection and Quantification of Methyl tert-Butyl Ether-Degrading Strain PM1 by Real-Time TaqMan PCR."  Applied & Environmental Microbiology, 67(11): 5154–5160.