Isolation and characterization of efficient isoxaben-transforming Microbacterium sp strains from four European soils

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Abstract

Nutrient-agar plates containing isoxaben (500mglitre-1) were used to isolate isoxabenmetabolising bacteria from four European soils incubated with the herbicide under laboratory conditions. In flask experiments, inoculation of a basal salts medium containing nitrogen and [phenyl-U-14C]isoxaben with an isolate (B2b) resulted in 33% recovery of the initial radioactivity as [14C]carbon dioxide after 2 weeks. A major metabolite identified by GC-MS and NMR analysis as 3-(1-ethyl-1-methylpropyl)isoxazol-5-ylamine accumulated both in basal salts and nutrient broth media. 2,6-Dimethoxybenzoic acid, a suspected metabolite of isoxaben, was not detected in either liquid media. However, the capability of the B2b isolate to use 2,6-dimethoxybenzoic acid as a source of carbon was demonstrated. Soil inoculation with the B2b strain resulted in an increase in the recovery of [14C]carbon dioxide from both [phenyl-U-14C] and [isoxazole-5-14C]isoxaben. The metabolite identified as 3-(1-ethyl-1-methylpropyl)isoxazole-5-ylamine only accumulated if the soil was autoclaved before inoculation. This metabolite was rapidly mineralized by the microflora of a natural soil without history of isoxaben treatment. Homology patterns of sequenced 16S rDNA between isoxabentransforming isolates and reference strains showed that the four isolates identified belonged to the genus Microbacterium. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry.

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Arrault, S., Desaint, S., Catroux, C., Sémon, E., Mougin, C., & Fournier, J. C. (2002). Isolation and characterization of efficient isoxaben-transforming Microbacterium sp strains from four European soils. Pest Management Science, 58(12), 1229–1235. https://doi.org/10.1002/ps.599

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