United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA.
Water Res. 2015 Jan 1;68:719-30. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2014.10.054.
In drinking water, monochloramine may promote ammonia–oxidizing bacteria (AOB) growth because of concurrent ammonia presence. AOB use (i) ammonia monooxygenase for biological ammonia oxidation to hydroxylamine and (ii) hydroxylamine oxidoreductase for biological hydroxylamine oxidation to nitrite. In addition, monochloramine and hydroxylamine abiotically react, providing AOB a potential benefit by removing the disinfectant (monochloramine) and releasing growth substrate (ammonia). Alternatively and because biological hydroxylamine oxidation supplies the electrons (reductant) required for biological ammonia oxidation, the monochloramine/hydroxylamine abiotic reaction represents a possible inactivation mechanism by consuming hydroxylamine and inhibiting reductant generation. To investigate the abiotic monochloramine and hydroxylamine reaction's impact on AOB activity, the current study used batch experiments with Nitrosomonas europaea (AOB pure culture), ammonia, monochloramine, and hydroxylamine addition. To decipher whether hydroxylamine addition benefitted N. europaea activity by (i) removing monochloramine and releasing free ammonia or (ii) providing an additional effect (possibly the aforementioned reductant source), a previously developed cometabolism model was coupled with an abiotic monochloramine and hydroxylamine model for data interpretation. N. europaea maintained ammonia oxidizing activity when hydroxylamine was added before complete ammonia oxidation cessation. The impact could not be accounted for by monochloramine removal and free ammonia release alone and was concentration dependent for both monochloramine and hydroxylamine. In addition, a preferential negative impact occurred for ammonia versus hydroxylamine oxidation. These results suggest an additional benefit of exogenous hydroxylamine addition beyond monochloramine removal and free ammonia release, possibly providing reductant generation.
在饮用水中,由于氨的同时存在,一氯胺可能会促进氨氧化细菌(AOB)的生长。AOB 利用 (i) 氨单加氧酶将生物氨氧化为羟胺,以及 (ii) 羟胺氧化还原酶将生物羟胺氧化为亚硝酸盐。此外,一氯胺和羟胺会发生非生物反应,通过去除消毒剂(一氯胺)并释放生长基质(氨),为 AOB 提供潜在益处。或者,由于生物羟胺氧化为生物氨氧化提供了所需的电子(还原剂),因此一氯胺/羟胺非生物反应通过消耗羟胺和抑制还原剂生成,代表了一种可能的失活机制。为了研究非生物一氯胺和羟胺反应对 AOB 活性的影响,本研究使用了含有 Nitrosomonas europaea(AOB 纯培养物)、氨、一氯胺和羟胺的分批实验。为了解释羟胺的添加是否通过 (i) 去除一氯胺并释放游离氨,或 (ii) 提供额外的效果(可能是上述还原剂来源)而有益于 N. europaea 的活性,先前开发的共代谢模型与非生物一氯胺和羟胺模型相结合,用于数据解释。当在完全停止氨氧化之前添加羟胺时,N. europaea 保持氨氧化活性。这种影响不能仅通过去除一氯胺和释放游离氨来解释,并且对一氯胺和羟胺的浓度均有依赖性。此外,氨氧化比羟胺氧化受到更优先的负面影响。这些结果表明,除了去除一氯胺和释放游离氨之外,外加羟胺还有额外的益处,可能提供还原剂的生成。