Substrate-dependent denitrification of abundant probe-defined denitrifying bacteria in activated sludge

The denitrification capacity of different phylogenetic bacterial groups was investigated on addition of different substrates in activated sludge from two nutrient-removal plants. Nitrate/nitrite consumption rates (CRs) were calculated from nitrate and nitrite biosensor, in situ measurements. The nit...

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Veröffentlicht in:FEMS microbiology ecology 2008-11, Vol.66 (2), p.447-461
Hauptverfasser: Morgan-Sagastume, Fernando, Nielsen, Jeppe Lund, Nielsen, Per Halkjær
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The denitrification capacity of different phylogenetic bacterial groups was investigated on addition of different substrates in activated sludge from two nutrient-removal plants. Nitrate/nitrite consumption rates (CRs) were calculated from nitrate and nitrite biosensor, in situ measurements. The nitrate/nitrite CRs depended on the substrate added, and acetate alone or combined with other substrates yielded the highest rates (3-6 mg N gVSS⁻¹ h⁻¹). The nitrate CRs were similar to the nitrite CRs for most substrates tested. The structure of the active denitrifying population was investigated using heterotrophic CO₂ microautoradiography (HetCO₂-MAR) and FISH. Probe-defined denitrifiers appeared as specialized substrate utilizers despite acetate being preferentially used by most of them. Azoarcus and Accumulibacter abundance in the two different sludges was related to differences in their substrate-specific nitrate/nitrite CRs. Aquaspirillum-related bacteria were the most abundant potential denitrifiers (c. 20% of biovolume); however, Accumulibacter (3-7%) and Azoarcus (2-13%) may have primarily driven denitrification by utilizing pyruvate, ethanol, and acetate. Activated sludge denitrification was potentially conducted by a diverse, versatile population including not only Betaproteobacteria (Aquaspirillum, Thauera, Accumulibacter, and Azoarcus) but also some Alphaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria, as indicated by the assimilation of ¹⁴CO₂ by these probe-defined groups with a complex substrate mixture as an electron donor and nitrite as an electron acceptor in HetCO₂-MAR-FISH tests.
ISSN:0168-6496
1574-6941
DOI:10.1111/j.1574-6941.2008.00571.x