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Decoding Microbial Reductive Dechlorination of 209 Polychlorinated Biphenyl Congeners through Experiment-Aided Quantum Chemistry and Machine Learning.

Wang S, He H, Zhang S, Tian L, Lu Q

Phytoremediation

PCB-contaminated soil stunts or kills garden plants and accumulates in vegetables you grow — knowing precisely how bacteria dismantle these pollutants brings us closer to bioremediation treatments that could actually detoxify your soil.

Polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, are stubborn industrial chemicals that were banned but still lurk in soils and rivers worldwide, harming ecosystems and the plants and food grown in them. Researchers built a computer model — trained on lab data and quantum physics — that can predict exactly which chlorine atoms soil bacteria will strip off any of the 209 different PCB molecules. This roadmap could help scientists design smarter, faster ways to clean up contaminated land using the bacteria that already live there.

Key Findings

1

The integrated model predicted reductive dechlorination pathways for all 209 PCB congeners with 98.3% accuracy.

2

Combining Hirshfeld charge analysis (a quantum chemical measure of electron distribution) with empirically derived steric (3-D shape) effects was key to achieving high prediction accuracy.

3

High-throughput enzymatic assays provided the experimental data needed to train and validate the machine learning model, linking lab biology directly to computational predictions.

chevron_right Technical Summary

Scientists combined lab experiments, quantum chemistry, and AI to map exactly how soil bacteria break down all 209 forms of PCBs — toxic industrial chemicals banned decades ago but still widespread in soil and waterways. The model predicted the correct breakdown pathway with 98.3% accuracy, a major step toward designing targeted cleanup strategies.

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Abstract Preview

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) persist globally as legacy pollutants with a complex structural diversity that complicates the understanding of their microbial conversion processes and remediation...

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hub This connects to 10 other discoveries — phytoremediation, soil-health, bioremediation +2 more 5 related articles

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