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Insights into Ammonia Adaptation and Methanogenic Precursor Oxidation by Genome-Centric Analysis
Author(s) -
Miao Yan,
Laura Treu,
Xinyu Zhu,
Hailin Tian,
Arianna Basile,
Ioannis A. Fotidis,
Stefano Campanaro,
Irini Angelidaki
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.0c01945
Subject(s) - ammonia , formate , methanogenesis , chemistry , sodium hydrosulfide , biochemistry , archaea , formate dehydrogenase , osmoprotectant , operon , acetogenesis , candidatus , environmental chemistry , methane , organic chemistry , catalysis , amino acid , genome , sulfur , escherichia coli , hydrogen sulfide , gene , proline
Ammonia released from the degradation of protein and/or urea usually leads to suboptimal anaerobic digestion (AD) when N-rich organic waste is used. However, the insights behind the differential ammonia tolerance of anaerobic microbiomes remain an enigma. In this study, the cultivation in synthetic medium with different carbon sources (acetate, methanol, formate, and H 2 /CO 2 ) shaped a common initial inoculum into four unique ammonia-tolerant syntrophic populations. Specifically, various levels of ammonia tolerance were observed: consortia fed with methanol and H 2 /CO 2 could grow at ammonia levels up to 7.25 g NH + -N/L, whereas the other two groups (formate and acetate) only thrived at 5.25 and 4.25 g NH + -N/L, respectively. Metabolic reconstruction highlighted that this divergent microbiome might be achieved by complementary metabolisms to maximize biomethane recovery from carbon sources, thus indicating the importance of the syntrophic community in the AD of N-rich substrates. Besides, sodium/proton antiporter operon, osmoprotectant/K + regulator, and osmoprotectant synthesis operon may function as the main drivers of adaptation to the ammonia stress. Moreover, energy from the substrate-level phosphorylation and multiple energy-converting hydrogenases ( e.g. , Ech and Eha) could aid methanogens to balance the energy request for anabolic activities and contribute to thriving when exposed to high ammonia levels.

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