RNA-based biomarkers have been successfully detected at field sites undergoing in situ
bioremediation, but the detection of expressed enzymes is a more direct way to prove
activity for a particular biocatalytic process of interest since they provide evidence
of potential in situ activity rather than simply confirming presence and abundance
of genes in a given population by measurement of DNA copies using qPCR. Here
we successfully applied shotgun proteomics to field samples from a trichloroethene
(TCE)-contaminated industrial site in southern Ontario, Canada that had been bioaugmented with the commercially available KB-1TM microbial culture. The KB-1TM
culture contains multiple strains of Dehalococcoides mccartyi (D. mccartyi) as well
as an organohalide respiring Geobacter species. The relative abundances of specific
enzymatic proteins were subsequently compared to corresponding qPCR-derived levels
of DNA and RNA biomarkers in the same samples. Samples were obtained from two
wells with high hydraulic connectivity to the KB-1TM-bioaugemented enhanced in situ
bioremediation system, and two control wells that showed evidence of low levels
of native organohalide respiring bacteria (OHRB), Dehalococcoides and Geobacter.
Enzymes involved in organohalide respiration were detected in the metaproteomes of
all four field samples, as were chaperonins of D. mccartyi, chemotaxis proteins, and
ATPases. The most highly expressed RDase in the bioaugmentation culture (VcrA) was
the most highly detected enzyme overall in the bioaugmented groundwater samples.
In one background groundwater well, we found high expression of the Geobacter
pceA RDase. The DNA and RNA biomarkers detected using qPCR-based assays
were a set of orthologs of Dehalococcoides reductive dehalogenases (VcrA, TceA,
BvcA, dehalogenase “DET1545”), and the Ni-Fe uptake hydrogenase, HupL. Within a
sample, RNA levels for key enzymes correlated with relative protein abundance. These
results indicate that laboratory observations of TCE-bioremediation biomarker protein
expression are recapitulated in field environmental systems and that both RNA and
protein biomarker monitoring hold promise for activity monitoring of in situ populations
of OHRB.
Keywords: reductive dehalogenase, organohalid
Published: April 1, 2022
Citation
Heavner G.L., C.B. Mansfeldt, M.J. Wilkins, C.D. Nicora, G.E. Debs, E.A. Edwards, and R.E. Richardson. 2019.Detection of Organohalide-Respiring Enzyme Biomarkers at a Bioaugmented TCE-Contaminated Field Site.Frontiers in Microbiology 10.PNNL-SA-147432.doi:10.3389/fmicb.2019.01433