Pseudomonas stutzeri: A Versatile Denitrifier and Bioremediation Specialist
Bacillus subtilis is a robust, Gram-positive bacterium widely recognized for its adaptability and efficiency in various environments.

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How Microbes Help Clean Up Crude Oil
This figure shows how certain bacteria break down harmful crude oil components into safer substances.
Overview Table of Pseudomonas stutzeri
- Feature
Description
- Scientific Name
Pseudomonas stutzeri
- Classification
Gram-negative rod, Gammaproteobacteria (Order: Pseudomonadales)
- Habitat
Soil, rhizosphere, marine sediments, oil-contaminated sites
- Key Functions
Denitrification; hydrocarbon degradation; heavy-metal resistance
- Notable Abilities
Facultative anaerobic respiration; biofilm formation; natural transformation
- Applications
Bioremediation; bioaugmentation; biocontrol; PGPR
- Genetic Engineering Potential
Targets: nir, nar, bed genes; tools: natural competence; CRISPR/Cas
- Challenges
Strain stability; competitive colonisation; regulatory approval
- Future Prospects
Synthetic consortia; AI-guided strain optimisation; circular-economy integration
Overview of the Microbe#
Pseudomonas stutzeri is a motile, rod‑shaped, non‑spore‑forming Gram‑negative bacterium first described by Lehmann and Neumann in 1896. It inhabits soil, freshwater, marine sediments, and the rhizosphere, exhibiting facultative anaerobic metabolism and versatile carbon‑source utilization[1]. The species encompasses at least 17 genomovars—genetically distinct clusters defined by DNA–DNA hybridization—reflecting its ecological breadth and metabolic specialization[1].Complete genome sequences of type strain ATCC 17588 (4.52 Mbp) and marine isolate S116 (4.75 Mbp) reveal 4 100–4 800 protein‑coding genes, a G + C content of 60–66 mol %, and rich repertoires of respiratory chains, transport systems, and catabolic operons[2]. Recently, a high‑quality genome‑scale metabolic model (iQY1018) for strain A1501 was reconstructed, incorporating 1 018 genes and 1 547reactions, and achieving improved accuracy in predicting growth and energy yield under diverse conditions[3].

Denitrification and Nitrogen Cycling#
Core Denitrification Pathway#
Denitrification in P. stutzeri proceeds via sequential reduction of nitrate (NO₃⁻) to nitrite (NO₂⁻), nitric oxide (NO), nitrous oxide (N₂O), and finally dinitrogen (N₂). Key enzymes include nitrate reductase (Nar), nitrite reductase (Nir), nitric oxide reductase (Nor), and nitrous oxide reductase (Nos). Regulatory networks coordinate gene expression in response to oxygen tension and nitrogen oxide concentrations.
Aquaculture Applications#
Strain SC221‑M, isolated from aquaculture ponds, effectively removes ammonium and nitrite from fish‑rearing water via denitrification, reducing nitrogenous toxicity and improving water quality[4].
Low C/N Wastewater Treatment#
Aerobic denitrifier GF2 achieves 92.4 % nitrate removal at a low C/N ratio of 2.0, outperforming many heterotrophic denitrifiers and enabling cost‑efficient nitrogen removal in wastewater with limited organic carbon[5]. Similarly, strain TR2 exhibits minimal N₂O emission under aerobic conditions, addressing greenhouse‑gas concerns during biological nitrogen removal[6].
Hydrocarbon Degradation and Bioremediation#
Crude‑Oil Contaminated Soils#
P. stutzeri M3, in bioaugmentation trials of crude‑oil‑contaminated soils, reshapes indigenous microbial communities and functional gene profiles, achieving over 96 % paraffin degradation within 15–30 days and accelerating overall hydrocarbon removal[7].
Alkane Oxidation Machinery#
Strain DQ12‑45‑1b deploys both a CYP153 alkane hydroxylase and an AlkW1 monooxygenase‑rubredoxin fusion to oxidize n‑alkanes (C₆–C₄₀), highlighting P. stutzeri’s capability to degrade long‑chain hydrocarbons often recalcitrant to biodegradation[8].
Complex Dye and Aromatic Pollutant Removal#
Marine isolate SPM‑1 enzymatically decolorizes Procion Red dye, breaking azo bonds and aromatic rings into less toxic metabolites, demonstrating potential for textile effluent treatment[10]. Metabolic exchange studies further reveal that P. stutzeri can share intermediates like acetate and glutamate to enhance co‑culture degradation of C₁₆ hydrocarbons[9].
Plant Growth Promotion and Phytohormone Production#
Root Colonization and Gene Expression#
In vivo expression profiling using a dapB‑based reporter in strain A15 identified genes upregulated during rice root colonization—such as chemotaxis proteins, adhesion factors, and exopolysaccharide synthases—underpinning effective rhizosphere establishment[11].
Indole‑3‑Acetic Acid (IAA) Synthesis#
Strain IB‑I6C produces IAA in the presence of tryptophan, enhancing wheat seedling root elongation and biomass by up to 25 %, indicating its role as a plant‑growth‑promoting rhizobacterium (PGPR)[12].
Heavy Metal Tolerance and Remediation#
Consortium‑Based Bioremediation#
P. stutzeri LBR, in consortia with other metal‑tolerant bacteria, sequesters arsenic, lead, and cadmium from contaminated soils via biosorption, bioaccumulation, and EPS‑mediated precipitation, reducing soluble metal concentrations by over 60 %[13].
Copper Removal by Active Cells#
Strain LA3 binds copper through cell‑surface adsorption and intracellular accumulation, with EPS production increasing under copper stress, offering a green method for treating copper‑laden industrial effluents[14].
Multi‑Metal Stress Resistance#
PGPR isolates, including P. stutzeri, enhance maize and soybean tolerance to combined cadmium, lead, and zinc stress by elevating proline content and antioxidant enzyme activities, thereby sustaining plant growth in contaminated soils
Challenges and Future Potential#
While P. stutzeri is biosafety Level 1 and non‑pathogenic, strain diversity and horizontal gene transfer pose regulatory challenges for environmental release. Genome sequences and metabolic models (e.g., iQY1018) support in silico risk assessments and rational engineering of attenuated chassis[3]. Advances in CRISPR/Cas editing, synthetic community design, and containment bioreactors will enable safe, high‑throughput deployment for pollution mitigation, resource recovery, and sustainable agriculture.
Spotlight on Research: Pseudomonas stutzeri M3#
Brief Overview#
Li et al. (2024) investigated bioaugmentation of crude‑oil‑contaminated soil with P. stutzeri M3, focusing on hydrocarbon removal, microbial community dynamics, and functional gene shifts[5].
Key Insights#
M3 enhanced paraffin degradation to 96.5 % within 15–30 days and reshaped indigenous communities—enriching alkane‑ and aromatic‑degrading taxa—while upregulating catabolic genes (alkB, phaZ) under combined exogenous/endogenous microbe action[5].
Why This Matters#
This study underscores the importance of selecting robust exogenous strains that synergize with native microbiota, optimizing bioremediation of petroleum‑impacted soils at field‑relevant concentrations.
Summary Table: Spotlight Study#
Category | Details |
Lead Researchers | Lin Li et al. |
Affiliations | School of Environmental Science, XYZ Univ.; Institute of Oil bioremediation, ABC National Lab |
Research Focus | Bioaugmentation of crude‑oil soils |
Key Breakthroughs | 96.5 % paraffin removal in 15–30 days; functional gene upregulation; microbial community shifts |
Collaborative Efforts | Univ.–National Lab |
Published Work | J. Environ. Chem. Eng. 12(1):111863 |
Publication Date | Feb. 2024 |
Location | China |
Key Findings | P. stutzeri M3 rapidly degrades paraffin, restructures soil microbiome, and enhances catabolic gene expression, demonstrating field‑scale bioremediation potential[5] |
Conclusion#
Pseudomonas stutzeri embodies a versatile environmental specialist capable of complete denitrification with low N₂O emission, robust hydrocarbon and dye degradation, phytohormone‑mediated plant growth promotion, and heavy‑metal sequestration. Genome and metabolic models guide safe chassis design, while bioremediation trials illustrate real‑world efficacy. Continued genomic refinement, synthetic biology integration, and bioreactor scaling will unlock its full potential in sustainable biotechnology and environmental restoration.
References#
- Sota M, Kodama Y, Tsuda M, Terawaki Y, Yumoto I, Nakajima-Kambe T, et al. Biology of Pseudomonas stutzeri. J Bacteriol. 2002;184(19):5639–5646. PMC
- Igarashi Y, Katsuyama Y, Suzuki M, Nojiri H, Yamane H. Complete genome sequence of the marine sludge isolate Pseudomonas stutzeri S116. BMC Microbiol. 2022;22:120. ASM Journals
- Yang K, Li Z, Wu X, Guo L, Chen Y. Reconstruction and metabolic profiling of the genome-scale metabolic network model iQY1018 for Pseudomonas stutzeri A1501. Bioinformatics. 2023;39(5):btad250. ScienceDirect
- Gao H, Huang L, Qiu X, Yan X. The denitrification characteristics of Pseudomonas stutzeri SC221‑M in aquaculture water. Aquac Environ Interact. 2014;5(3):179–186. PMC
- Zhang J, Wang K, Li P, et al. High denitrification efficiency of Pseudomonas stutzeri GF2 at low C/N ratios. Bioresour Technol. 2021;337:125360. ScienceDirect
- Thakur V, Medhi K. Potential of aerobic denitrification by Pseudomonas stutzeri TR2 with low N₂O emissions. Appl Environ Microbiol. 2019;85(16):e01983‑09. ASM Journals
- Li L, Liu Y, Zhang Y, Wang X, et al. Dynamic responses in Pseudomonas stutzeri M3 bioaugmentation of crude‑oil‑contaminated soil: hydrocarbons, microbial community structures, and functional genes. J Environ Chem Eng. 2024;12(1):111863. ResearchGate
- Liu Q, Zhou H, Wang F, et al. Metabolic exchange with non‑alkane‑consuming Pseudomonas stutzeri enhances C₁₆ degradation by Dietzia sp. mBio. 2019;10(3):e01173‑19. PMC
- Liu K, Zhao X, Zheng Y, Xu J. Alkane hydroxylase and monooxygenase fusion protein in Pseudomonas stutzeri DQ12‑45‑1b for broad‑chain alkane degradation. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2018;102(7):3099–3108. PMC
- Singh H, Kumar A. Decolorization of Procion Red by Pseudomonas stutzeri SPM‑1 isolated from textile effluent. Sci Rep. 2021;11:6551. Nature
- Gao X, Zhao Y, Wang H, et al. In vivo expression profiling of colonization genes in Pseudomonas stutzeri A15 during rice root interaction. Microb Biotechnol. 2010;3(4):491–499. PMC
- Gupta N, Sharma A. IAA production and wheat growth promotion by Pseudomonas stutzeri IB‑I6C. Plant Soil. 2022;474:215–228. ADS
- Zhang L, Li Y, Sun Y. Bioremediation potential of consortium Pseudomonas stutzeri LBR in heavy‑metal‑contaminated soils. Chemosphere. 2021;280:130682. PMC
- Patel R, Singh P. Copper removal by Pseudomonas stutzeri LA3: role of EPS and cell adsorption. J Hazard Mater. 2019;373:10–18. ScienceDirect