
Inferring community dynamics of organohalide‐respiring bacteria in chemostats by covariance of rdhA gene abundance
Author(s) -
Marshall Ian P.G.,
Azizian Mohammad F.,
Semprini Lewis,
Spormann Alfred M.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
fems microbiology ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.377
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1574-6941
pISSN - 0168-6496
DOI - 10.1111/1574-6941.12235
Subject(s) - biology , dehalococcoides , chemostat , bacteria , gene , dehalogenase , population , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , demography , organic chemistry , vinyl chloride , sociology , copolymer , polymer
We have developed a novel approach to identifying and quantifying closely related organohalide‐respiring bacteria. Our approach made use of the unique genomic associations of specific reductive dehalogenase subunit A encoding genes ( rdhA ) that exist in known strains of D ehalococcoides mccartyi and D esulfitobacterium and the distinguishing covariance pattern of observed rdhA genes to assign genes to unknown strains. To test this approach, we operated five anaerobic reductively dechlorinating chemostats for 3–4 years with tetrachloroethene and trichloroethene as terminal electron acceptors and lactate/formate as electron donors. The presence and abundance of rdhA genes were determined comprehensively at the community level using a custom‐developed R eductive D ehalogenase C hip ( RDH Chip) DNA microarray and used to define putative strains of D ehalococcoides mccartyi and D esulfitobacterium sp. This monitoring revealed that stable chemical performance of chemostats was reflected by a stable community of reductively dechlorinating bacteria. However, perturbations introduced by, for example, electron donor limitation or addition of the competing electron acceptor sulfate led to overall changes in the chemostat performance, including incomplete reduction in the chloroethene substrates, and in the population composition of reductively dehalogenating bacteria. Interestingly, there was a high diversity of operationally defined D . mccartyi strains between the chemostats with almost all strains unique to their specific chemostats in spite of similar selective pressure and similar inocula shared between chemostats.