Metagenomic analysis of two enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) sludge communities
Author(s) -
Héctor García Martín,
Natalia Ivanova,
Victor Kunin,
Falk Warnecke,
Kerrie Barry,
Alice C. McHardy,
Christine Yeates,
Shaomei He,
Asaf Salamov,
Ernest Szeto,
Eileen Dalin,
Nicholas H. Putnam,
Harris Shapiro,
Jasmyn Pangilinan,
Isidore Rigoutsos,
Nikos C. Kyrpides,
Linda L. Blackall,
Katherine D. McMahon,
Philip Hugenholtz
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
nature biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.358
H-Index - 445
eISSN - 1546-1696
pISSN - 1087-0156
DOI - 10.1038/nbt1247
Subject(s) - enhanced biological phosphorus removal , metagenomics , organism , biology , ecology , adaptation (eye) , biochemical engineering , microbiology and biotechnology , sewage treatment , activated sludge , genetics , environmental science , gene , environmental engineering , neuroscience , engineering
Enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) is one of the best-studied microbially mediated industrial processes because of its ecological and economic relevance. Despite this, it is not well understood at the metabolic level. Here we present a metagenomic analysis of two lab-scale EBPR sludges dominated by the uncultured bacterium, "Candidatus Accumulibacter phosphatis." The analysis sheds light on several controversies in EBPR metabolic models and provides hypotheses explaining the dominance of A. phosphatis in this habitat, its lifestyle outside EBPR and probable cultivation requirements. Comparison of the same species from different EBPR sludges highlights recent evolutionary dynamics in the A. phosphatis genome that could be linked to mechanisms for environmental adaptation. In spite of an apparent lack of phylogenetic overlap in the flanking communities of the two sludges studied, common functional themes were found, at least one of them complementary to the inferred metabolism of the dominant organism. The present study provides a much needed blueprint for a systems-level understanding of EBPR and illustrates that metagenomics enables detailed, often novel, insights into even well-studied biological systems.
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