Rhizobium to the Rescue |
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If you think cleaning up your room is a hassle, just imagine having to clean up a hazardous waste site! When it comes to toxic chemicals that have escaped into the environment, clean-up duty can become downright dangerous. |
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Their
bacterial “recruits” belong to a family called Rhizobium, which lives on alfalfa and soybean
roots. There, the helpful microbes supply the plants with nitrogen for
food and growth. This partnership also helps keep the soil fertile and
healthy. That’s something you generally won’t find at contaminated site,
like a landfill or mining operation. |
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(Photo: The roots of soybean
and alfalfa plants help keep soils healthy and fertile, thanks to the busy
little Rhizobium bacteria that live in
them.) |
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Think of this enzyme as a kind of carpet cleaner your little brother or sister might use in your room. But instead of dirt and grime, the bacteria’s enzyme helps clean soils contaminated by toxic chemicals like TNT or toluene. Toluene is a common ingredient in fuel and dyes. |
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(Photo: a cross-section of a root nodule--a tiny lump in which Rhizobium bacteria would do their clean-up work. Each nodule is occupied by about a billion of the rod-shaped microbes.) |
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TNT isn’t the only chemical the busy little bacteria will take on. The microbes also break apart DNT. This is a chemical that makes plastic and Styrofoam such a serious waste disposal problem. |
“You put them in landfills and they just sit there. They don’t degrade” quickly, says Gail Hollowell, pictured at right. As a student not long ago, she helped ARS and Howard University scientists study the Rhizobium bacteria. Her mentors, ARS horticulturist David Kuykendall and HU professor Sisir Dutta, came up with the idea of hiring on the Rhizobium bacteria. Their partners include scientists Fawzy Hashem and Bill Gillette, as well the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The Corps is looking for cheap methods of restoring the health of contaminated soils at military sites. But it wants something that won’t cause more environmental harm. |
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Scientists aren’t sure the bacteria and their plant partners will be the “magic bullet” in the war on wastes. |
“It would be nice if this completely decontaminated the fields,” says Hollowell, now a National Institutes of Health researcher. “But even if it doesn’t, and you only get partial degradation, that’s still an improvement.” |
--By Jan Suszkiw, Information Staff, Agricultural Research Service
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