Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Li Z" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Management of brain-heart multimorbidity: a clinical practice guideline Edwards JD; Li Z; McFarlane P; Rabi DM; Gilbert J; Bajaj HS; MacIntosh BJ; Bittman J; Feldman RD; Dresser G; Terenzi K; Swartz R; Gabor J; Pearson GJ; Selby P; Wharton S; Warburton DER; Pakhalé S; Styra R; Baker B; Tu K; Hawkins M; Stone JA; Vaillancourt T; Poon S; Virani SA; Jain R; Jones PH; Sandhu RK; Ganesh A; Andrade JG; Stern S; Habert J; Rivard L; Roumeliotis P; Udell JA; Campbell T; Bacon SL; Trudeau L; Keshavjee K; Pham T; Cheng G; Lewis KB; Maar M; Stacey D; Oldenburg B; Dhukai AR; Pasricha SV; Sh 41912243
HKAP
2 Laboratory-scale simulation study on the bioremediation of marine oil pollution by phosphate-solubilizing bacteria Bacillus subtilis PSB-1 Du Z; Li Z; Chen X; Liu M; Feng L; Li Q; Chen Z; Chen Q; 41707285
ENCS
3 Understanding the environmental fate and risks of organophosphate esters: Challenges in linking precursors, parent compounds, and derivatives Li Z; Chen R; Xing C; Zhong G; Zhang X; Jones KC; Zhu Y; 40845576
CHEMBIOCHEM
4 Disentangled representation learning for multi-view clustering via von Mises-Fisher hyperspherical embedding Li Z; Luo Z; Bouguila N; Su W; Fan W; 40664160
ENCS
5 Enhanced biodegradation of crude oil by phosphate-solubilizing bacteria Bacillus subtilis PSB-1: Overcoming soluble phosphorus deficiency Wang X; Du Z; Li Z; Liu M; Mu J; Feng L; Chen Z; Chen Q; 40609441
ENCS
6 Lung fibrosis: drug screening and disease biomarker identification with a lung slice culture model and subtracted cDNA Library Guo T; Lok KY; Yu C; Li Z; 25290944
JMSB
7 Effects of electron acceptors and donors on anaerobic biodegradation of PAHs in marine sediments Chen Q; Li Z; Chen Y; Liu M; Yang Q; Zhu B; Mu J; Feng L; Chen Z; 38113802
ENCS
8 Degradation of enrofloxacin by a novel Fe-N-C@ZnO material in freshwater and seawater: Performance and mechanism Geng C; Chen Q; Li Z; Liu M; Chen Z; Tao H; Yang Q; Zhu B; Feng L; 37619630
ENCS
9 Health behavior profiles in young survivors of childhood cancer: Findings from the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort Study Webster RT; Dhaduk R; Gordon ML; Partin RE; Kunin-Batson AS; Brinkman TM; Willard VW; Allen JM; Alberts NM; Lanctot JQ; Ehrhardt MJ; Li Z; Hudson MM; Robison LL; Ness KK; 36943740
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Lymph Node Metastases Detection Using Gd2O3@PCD as Novel Multifunctional Contrast Imaging Agent in Metabolic Magnetic Resonance Molecular Imaging Rasouli Z; Riyahi-Alam N; Khoobi M; Haghgoo S; Gholibegloo E; Ebrahimpour A; H A; Hashemi H; 36304774
PERFORM
11 Indoor exposure to selected flame retardants and quantifying importance of environmental, human behavioral and physiological parameters Li Z; Zhang X; Wang B; Shen G; Zhang Q; Zhu Y; 35461943
CHEMBIOCHEM
12 Modeling of Flame Retardants in Typical Urban Indoor Environments in China during 2010-2030: Influence of Policy and Decoration and Implications for Human Exposure Li Z; Zhu Y; Wang D; Zhang X; Jones KC; Ma J; Wang P; Yang R; Li Y; Pei Z; Zhang Q; Jiang G; 34410710
CHEMBIOCHEM
13 Self-tunable engineered yeast probiotics for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease Scott BM; Gutiérrez-Vázquez C; Sanmarco LM; da Silva Pereira JA; Li Z; Plasencia A; Hewson P; Cox LM; O' Brien M; Chen SK; Moraes-Vieira PM; Chang BSW; Peisajovich SG; Quintana FJ; 34183837
CHEMBIOCHEM
14 Change in Pain Status and Subsequent Opioid and Marijuana Use Among Long-Term Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer. Huang IC, Alberts NM, Buckley MG, Li Z, Ehrhardt MJ, Brinkman TM, Allen J, Krull KR, Klosky JL, Greene WL, Srivastava DK, Robison LL, Hudson MM, Anghelescu DL 33409451
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Enhanced biodegradation of crude oil by phosphate-solubilizing bacteria Bacillus subtilis PSB-1: Overcoming soluble phosphorus deficiency
Authors:Wang XDu ZLi ZLiu MMu JFeng LChen ZChen Q
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40609441/
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.126426
Publication:Journal of environmental management
Keywords:BiodegradationDegradation characteristicsMarine oil pollutionPhosphate solubilizing bacteriaPhosphorus dissolution mechanism
PMID:40609441 Category: Date Added:2025-07-04
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Pollution Control for Port-Petrochemical Industry, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China; School of Marine Science & Technology, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China.
2 Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Pollution Control for Port-Petrochemical Industry, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China; National & Local Joint Engineering Research Center of Harbor Oil & Gas Storage and Transportation Technology, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China.
3 Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Pollution Control for Port-Petrochemical Industry, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China.
4 College of Ecology and Environment, Hainan Tropical Ocean University, Sanya, 572022, PR China.
5 Department of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Engineering & Computer Sciences, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, H3G1M8, Canada.
6 Zhejiang Key Laboratory of Pollution Control for Port-Petrochemical Industry, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China; National & Local Joint Engineering Research Center of Harbor Oil & Gas Storage and Transportation Technology, Zhejiang Ocean University, Zhoushan, 316022, PR China. Electronic address: qgchen@zjou.edu.cn.

Description:

Due to the oligotrophic marine environment, the lack of phosphorus is one of the key factors limiting the oil biodegradation ability of microorganisms after the oil spill occurs. Overcoming phosphorus deficiency has become an urgent problem. In this study, a phosphate-solubilizing bacteria, named Bacillus subtilis PSB-1, with the crude oil degradation efficiency up to 93.7 %, was isolated from oil contaminated seawater. The strain PSB-1 significantly increased the content of solubilized phosphorus (P) to promote the degradation of oil pollutants. The yielding bioavailable P from 5 g·L-1 Ca3(PO4)2 and 2 g·L-1 sodium phytate was up to 17.14 mg·L-1 and 35.63 mg·L-1 in the culture with crude oil as the sole carbon source. The production of organic acids, such as oxalic and lactic acids, peaked at 263.52 mg·L-1 and 282.99 mg·L-1, respectively, indicating a potential enhancement of P availability due to the crucial role of organic acids in the process of P solubilization. The analysis of the degradation pathway of hydrocarbons and the content of alkaline phosphatase (AKP) under organic P deficiency indicated that pyruvate served as an intermediate product connecting P solubilization and hydrocarbons degradation. Molecular docking analysis provided evidence that AKP can interact with hydrocarbon molecules, suggesting a role in the degradation of hydrocarbons. This study offered a new way to oil spill bioremediation with the P deficient environment.





BookR developed by Sriram Narayanan
for the Concordia University School of Health
Copyright © 2011-2026
Cookie settings
Concordia University