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all three chemicals in a combination of the tod and tol metabolic pathways (Worsey and Williams

1975, Zylstra et al. 1988).

As a result of the inability of catechol 2,3-dioxygenase in the tod pathway to attack

3,6-dimethylpyrocatechol produced from p-xylene and xylene oxygenase in the athway to employ

benzene as a substrate, it is possible that complete biodegradation of the BTX combination through

these two pathways will not be possible (Worsey and Williams 1973, Zylstra et al. 1988, Gibson

et al. 1970, Gibson et al. 1974). Consequently, an existing route must be restructured. In order to

manipulate the genes for two pathways in P. putida, a hybrid metabolic pathway was constructed

around the crucial metabolic step. In P. putida, an attempt was made to mineralize BTX by a

hybrid route. To construct the hybrid pathway, a bridging step between the tod and tol pathways

was identified. The tol pathway destroys cis-glycol chemicals, which are metabolic intermediates

immediately before the catechol molecules in the tod pathway. As the only source of carbon, BCG

was 90% degraded (Lee et al. 1994). P. putida TB101 was generated by introducing the TOL plasmid

pWW0 into P. putida F39/D, a P. putida FI variant incapable of converting cis-glycol chemicals to

catechols. Toluate-cis-glycol dehydrogenase in P. putida TB101 diverted the metabolic flux of BTX

into the tod pathway at the level of cis-glycol molecules, resulting in the simultaneous mineralization

of BTX mixture without accumulation of any metabolic intermediates (Lee et al. 1994). Toluate-cis­

glycol dehydrogenase, which is encoded on the TOL plasmid of P. putida mt-2, was considered to

be responsible for the degradation of these cis-glycol compounds due to the comparable chemical

structure of its original substrates, benzoate-cis-glycol (BACG) and TACG. BCG was utilized as

a substrate during the toluate-cis-glycol dehydrogenase experiment. The observation shows that

the reaction product produced by BCG’s toluate-cis-glycol dehydrogenase may be destroyed by

catechol 2,3-dioxygenase, the enzyme that follows toluate-cis-glycol dehydrogenase in the tol

pathway. In P. putida TBlOl, a hybrid pathway was developed for the complete mineralization

of benzene, toluene and p-xylene. Using P. putida TBlOl, simultaneous biodegradation of BTX

combinations was accomplished with maximum specific degradation rates of 0.27, 0.86 and

2.89 mgmg–1 biomass/h for benzene, toluene, and p-xylene, respectively (Lee et al. 1994).

8.3.3 Phenylurea

Phenylureas like diuron linuron isoproturon and chlorotoluron were once used to control weeds, but

they have now contaminated drinking water. Diuron is a phenylurea herbicide that is used to control

weeds in a number of crops (Moretto et al. 2019). It has been found in soil and water (Giacomazzi

and Cochet 2004). Diuron has been linked to kidney disease, haematopoiesis and hemolytic anaemia

(Ihlaseh-Catalano et al. 2014). In high salinity conditions, the CASB3 strain of Stenotrophomonas

rhizophila was used to degrade diuron. Fifty mg L–1 diuron was completely degraded in 48 to

120 hr (Silambarasan et al. 2020). Arthrobacter globiformis D47 can ‘partially’ degrade herbicide

diuron via urea carbonyl group hydrolysis (Cullington and Walker 1999, Turnbull et al. 2001). The

concentration of 3,4-dichloroaniline (DCA) rises as the diuron degrades. A very small amount of

DCA can be converted to 3,3’ 4,4’ tetrachloroazobenzene and the remaining bulk of the DCA continue

bound to the organic matter with slow half-life for several years. Pseudomonas putida strain was

enriched for the demineralization of DCA. The pathway investigation study suggested biodegradion

through 3,4 dichloromuconate, 3 chlorobutenolide, 3 chlorolevulinic acid, 3 chloromelyelacetate

3chloro 4 ketadipate to succinate (You and Bartha 1982).

8.3.4 Methyl Parathion

Microbes are also decomposers that improve soil fertility by degrading pesticides and immobilizing

heavy metals. Toxic pollutants include organophosphate pesticides such as Methyl Parathion (MP)

and heavy metals like cadmium. MP-degrading enzymes are found in microbes such as Pseudomonas

sp. A3 (Ramanathan and Lalithakumari 1999), Plesiomonas sp. M6 (Zhongli et al. 2001), and

Pseudomonas sp. SMSP-1 (Shen et al. 2010). They convert Methylparathion to paranitrophenol