Influence of non-dechlorinating microbes on trichloroethene reduction based on vitamin B12 synthesis in anaerobic cultures
2020
Wen, Li-Lian | Li, Yaru | Zhu, Lizhong | Zhao, He-Ping
In this study, the YH consortium, an ethene-producing culture, was used to evaluate the effect of vitamin B₁₂ (VB₁₂) on trichloroethene (TCE) dechlorination by transferring the original TCE-reducing culture with or without adding exogenous VB₁₂. Ultra-high performance liquid chromatography - tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS/MS) was applied to detect the concentrations of VB₁₂ and its lower ligand 5,6-dimethylbenzimidazole (DMB) in the cultures. After three successive VB₁₂ starvation cycles, the dechlorination of TCE stopped mostly at cis-dichloroethene (cDCE), and no ethene was found; methane production increased significantly, and no VB₁₂ was detected. Results suggest that the co-cultured microbes may not be able to provide enough VB₁₂ as a cofactor for the growth of Dehalococcoides in the YH culture, possibly due to the competition for corrinoids between Dehalococcoides and methanogens. The relative abundances of 16 S rRNA gene of Dehalococcoides and reductive dehalogenase genes tceA or vcrA were lower in the cultures without VB₁₂ compared with the cultures with VB₁₂. VB₁₂ limitation changed the microbial community structures of the consortia. In the absence of VB₁₂, the microbial community shifted from dominance of Chloroflexi to Proteobacteria after three consecutive VB₁₂ starvation cycles, and the dechlorinating genus Dehalococcoides declined from 42.9% to 13.5%. In addition, Geobacter, Clostridium, and Desulfovibrio were also present in the cultures without VB₁₂. Furthermore, the abundance of archaea increased under VB₁₂ limited conditions. Methanobacterium and Methanosarcina were the predominant archaea in the culture without VB₁₂.
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