Organophosphorous insecticides are used extensively in agriculture. As a group, they are easily degraded by bacteria in the environment. However, a number of them have half-lives of several months. Little is known about their biodegradation by fungi. We showed that Phanerochaete chrysosporium mineralized chlorpyrifos, fonofos, and terbufos (27.5, 12.2, and 26.6%, respectively) during an 18-d incubation in nutrient nitrogen-limited cultures. Results demonstrated that the chlorinated pyridinyl ring of chlorpyrifos and the phenyl ring of fonofos undergo cleavage during biodegradation by the fungus. The usefulness of P. chrysosporium for bioremediation is discussed.
By using the spheroplast fusion technique as a tool for genetic analysis, we have demonstrated complementation among three of four isoleucine-valine mutants, two of three methionine mutants, and two arginine mutants of independent origin from two different Candida albicans isolates. The two adenine mutants derived from the same parent strain did not complement. Complementation resulted predominantly from heterokaryon formation and, in some cases, from heterozygote formation. In either case, most fusion products were unstable and showed nuclear as well as chromosomal segregation, in a few cases resulting in recombination of parental auxotrophic markers. However, some fusion products were fairly stable.
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