Assessing long-term ecological impacts of PCE contamination in groundwater using a flow cytometric fingerprint approach

This study aims to develop and validate a comprehensive method for assessing ecological disturbances in groundwater ecosystems caused by tetrachloroethylene (PCE) contamination, utilizing flow cytometry (FCM) fingerprint approach. We hypothesized that the ecological disturbance resulting from PCE co...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2024-06, Vol.931, p.172698-172698, Article 172698
Hauptverfasser: Hong, Jin-Kyung, Kim, Soo Bin, Wee, Gui Nam, Kang, Bo Ram, No, Jee Hyun, Nishu, Susmita Das, Park, Joonhong, Lee, Tae Kwon
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study aims to develop and validate a comprehensive method for assessing ecological disturbances in groundwater ecosystems caused by tetrachloroethylene (PCE) contamination, utilizing flow cytometry (FCM) fingerprint approach. We hypothesized that the ecological disturbance resulting from PCE contamination would exhibit ‘press disturbance’, persisting over extended periods, and inducing notable phenotypic differences in the microbial community compared to undisturbed groundwater. We collected 40 groundwater samples from industrial district with a history of over twenty years of PCE contamination, along with 56 control groundwater from the national surveillance groundwater system. FCM revealed significant alterations in the phenotypic diversity of microbial communities in PCE-contaminated groundwater, particularly during the dry season. The presence of specific dechlorinating bacteria (Dehalococcoides, Dehalogenimonas, and Geobacter) and their syntrophic partners was identified as an indicator of contamination. Phenotypic diversity measures provided clearer and more direct reflections of contamination impact compared to taxonomic diversity measures. This study establishes FCM fingerprinting as a simple, robust, and accurate method for evaluating ecological disturbances, with potential applications in early warning systems and continuous monitoring of groundwater contamination. The findings not only underscore the sensitivity of FCM in detecting phenotypic variations induced by environmental stressors but also highlight its utility in understanding the complex dynamics of microbial communities in contaminated groundwater ecosystems. [Display omitted] •Flow cytometry-based traits can evaluate ecological disturbance of groundwater.•PCE contamination induces an increase in the activity in the silent groundwater microbiome.•Phenotypic diversity of groundwater microbiome largely reflects its taxonomic features.•Active phenotypic cells are associated with dechlorinating bacteria.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172698