Department of Microbiology, IWWR, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Soehngen Institute of Anaerobic Microbiology, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2021 Jun 11;87(13):e0004321. doi: 10.1128/AEM.00043-21.
Methane and ammonia have to be removed from wastewater treatment effluent in order to discharge it to receiving water bodies. A potential solution for this is a combination of simultaneous ammonia and methane oxidation by anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) bacteria and nitrite/nitrate-dependent anaerobic methane oxidation (N-damo) microorganisms. When applied, these microorganisms will be exposed to oxygen, but little is known about the effect of a low concentration of oxygen on a culture containing these microorganisms. In this study, a stable coculture containing anammox and N-damo microorganisms in a laboratory scale bioreactor was established under oxygen limitation. Membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) was used to directly measure the simultaneous activity of N-damo, anammox, and aerobic ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms. In addition, batch tests revealed that the bioreactor also harbored aerobic methanotrophs and anaerobic methanogens. Together with fluorescence hybridization (FISH) analysis and metagenomics, these results indicate that the combination of N-damo and anammox activity under the continuous supply of limiting oxygen concentrations is feasible and can be implemented for the removal of methane and ammonia from anaerobic digester effluents. Nitrogen in wastewater leads to eutrophication of the receiving water bodies, and methane is a potent greenhouse gas; it is therefore important that these are removed from wastewater. A potential solution for the simultaneous removal of nitrogenous compounds and methane is the application of a combination of nitrite/nitrate-dependent methane oxidation (N-damo) and anaerobic ammonia oxidation (annamox). In order to do so, it is important to investigate the effect of oxygen on these two anaerobic processes. In this study, we investigate the effect of a continuous oxygen supply on the activity of an anaerobic methane- and ammonia-oxidizing coculture. The findings presented in this study are important for the potential application of these two microbial processes in wastewater treatment.
为了将废水处理出水排放到受纳水体中,必须去除其中的甲烷和氨。一种潜在的解决方案是将厌氧氨氧化(anammox)细菌和亚硝酸盐/硝酸盐依赖型厌氧甲烷氧化(N-damo)微生物同时进行氨和甲烷氧化相结合。在应用这些微生物时,它们将暴露在氧气中,但对于低浓度氧气对包含这些微生物的培养物的影响知之甚少。在这项研究中,在缺氧限制条件下,在实验室规模的生物反应器中建立了一种稳定的同时含有 anammox 和 N-damo 微生物的共培养物。膜入口质谱(MIMS)用于直接测量 N-damo、anammox 和好氧氨氧化微生物的同时活性。此外,批式试验表明,该生物反应器还含有好氧甲烷营养菌和厌氧产甲烷菌。结合荧光杂交(FISH)分析和宏基因组学,这些结果表明,在连续供应限制氧浓度的情况下,N-damo 和 anammox 活性的组合是可行的,可以用于从厌氧消化器废水中去除甲烷和氨。废水中的氮会导致受纳水体富营养化,甲烷是一种强效温室气体;因此,从废水中去除这些物质非常重要。同时去除含氮化合物和甲烷的潜在解决方案是应用亚硝酸盐/硝酸盐依赖型甲烷氧化(N-damo)和厌氧氨氧化(annamox)的组合。为此,重要的是要研究氧气对这两种厌氧过程的影响。在这项研究中,我们研究了连续氧气供应对厌氧甲烷和氨氧化共培养物活性的影响。本研究的结果对于这两种微生物过程在废水处理中的潜在应用非常重要。