
Inoculation of Rhodococcus by Selvapravin Kumaran
Photo Credit: © Dirk Tischler
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Soil Bacteria in Bioremediation
The Core Concept: Rhodococcus opacus 1CP is a highly adaptable soil bacterium equipped with a uniquely large genome capable of metabolizing toxic aromatic compounds into harmless carbon dioxide.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike microbes with rigid metabolic processes, this bacterium possesses extensive genomic redundancies. If primary enzymes are disabled or environmental conditions (such as temperature or oxygen levels) shift, alternative enzymes are dynamically recruited to establish new, functional metabolic pathways for breaking down pollutants.
Major Frameworks/Components:
- Genomic Redundancy: The encoding of multiple, overlapping enzymes within the same class that activate under varying environmental conditions.
- Dynamic Enzyme Recruitment: The biological fallback mechanism allowing the bacterium to recruit secondary enzymes (e.g., forming catechols) when primary enzymes for phenol and cresol breakdown are knocked out.
- Metabolic Conversion: The biochemical process of activating and metabolizing toxic substrates (like styrenes) to yield biological energy for the organism while off-gassing \(\ce{CO2}\).






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