Abstract
Triphenyl phosphate (TPHP), a typical organophosphate flame retardant, has been listed as an emerging pollutant, yet its biodegradation remains poorly studied. Herein, an efficient TPHP-degrading marine bacterium, Pseudomonas abyssi RL-WG04, was isolated from mangrove sediments, which could degrade 95.22% of 100 mg/L TPHP within 120 h. RL-WG04 exhibited good tolerance to varied environmental conditions, maintaining over 70% TPHP degradation percentages (100 mg/L, 7 d) across 20-50 °C, pH 7.0-9.0, and salinity 2.0-4.0% (NaCl, w/v). Organic solvents (p-xylene, biphenyl, toluene and ethyl acetate, 0.5% v/v) had a negligible impact, whereas metal ions (Mn(2+), Fe(3+), Ca(2+), Cu(2+), Mg(2+), Zn(2+), and Co(2+)) strongly inhibited degradation, especially at 1 mM. Under optimized conditions, TPHP degradation by RL-WG04 followed the improved Gompertz model (R(2) = 0.99927). Metabolite identification indicated that RL-WG04 transformed TPHP into phenol but failed to utilize phenol for growth because of the phenol 2-monooxygenase deficiency. Nevertheless, the constructed consortia of RL-WG04 and Pseudomonas sp. RL-LY03 (phenol-degrading bacterium) achieved complete TPHP degradation and cell proliferation. Additionally, RL-WG04 could efficiently remove TPHP (25 mg/kg) from clay and sandy mangrove sediments with 100% and 90.04% removal percentages, respectively. Overall, this work provides novel insights into the fate of TPHP and a potential approach for its remediation.