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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.
Show more [+] Less [-]Deciphering microbiomes in anaerobic reactors with superior trichloroethylene dechlorination performance at low pH conditions
2020
Chen, Wei-Yu | Wu, Jer-Horng | Chu, Shun-Chieh
Different pH conditions have been demonstrated to affect the activities of dechlorinating populations participating in the successive dechlorination of trichloroethylene to ethylene. However, the mechanism of the effect of pH conditions on the assembly of dechlorinating populations and their relations to the structure, function, and dynamics of the microbiome are unclear. In this study, we evaluated the effects of pH on microbiomes assembled in anaerobic trichloroethylene-dechlorinating reactors under neutral (pH 7.2), acidic (pH 6.2), and alkaline (pH 8.2) conditions. The results revealed that among the reactors, the acidic reactor had the highest efficiency for dechlorination without accumulation of dechlorinated metabolites, even at high loading rates. The results of high-throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene indicated that the microbiomes in the 3 reactors underwent varied dynamic succession. The acidic reactor harbored a higher degree of complex microbes, dechlorinator diversity, and abundance of the Victoria subgroup of Dehalococcoides (1.2 ± 0.1 × 10⁶ cell/mL), which were approximately 10–10²-fold higher than those at neutral and alkaline conditions. The pH settings altered species–species connectivity and complexity of microbial interaction networks, with more commensal interactions in the dechlorinators of the acidic reactor. As predicted, abundances of several functional gene categories were in strong linearity with pH values, and the microbiome possessed significantly more abundant functions in the acidic reactor (P < 0.001), such as potentially stimulating hydrogen production, cobalamin synthesis, cobalt transport, transport and metabolism of amino acids and secondary metabolites, cell motility, and transcription. All results of microbiomic analyses consistently revealed the observed superior dechlorination process and suggested an association of the reductive dechlorination process with the pH-dependent microbiome. The results of this study provide a new insight into the trichloroethylene dechlorination with regards to pH, and they will be useful for improving bioremediation and management of trichloroethylene-contaminated sites.
Show more [+] Less [-]Formulation of Green Bioactivator Based on Natural Products for Remediation of Polluted Waters
2021
Xu, Qiang | Xing, Hui | He, Chunling | Huang, Guangtuan
Bioactivator is a kind of agent rich in nutrients and a variety of active substances, which is considered as one of the green methods to deal with the pollution of natural waters because of its high efficiency, low cost, environment-friendly, and causing no secondary pollution. In this study, a green bioactivator formulation composed of fulvic acid, seaweed extract, and molasses (fulvic acid 1.744 mg/L: seaweed extract 1.756 mg/L: molasses 0.5 mg/L) was obtained by mixture design experiments, which can improve the removal rates of COD and NH₃-N by 15–25% and 7–15%, respectively, compared with untreated water. The effects of adding various carbon sources, trace elements, and growth factors on the basis of the developed formulation were explored to optimize the developed formulation and improve the effect of water remediation; the experiment results showed that sodium acetate and glucose as carbon sources were beneficial to the removal of NH₃-N; Mn, Mo, and B as trace elements can further increase the COD removal rates by 5.0–8.2%; niacin and vitamin B12 (VB12) as growth factors can increase COD removal rate by 7.5% and 4.7%, respectively. This study provides a green biological activator with good application prospect, which can be applied to the remediation of polluted water.
Show more [+] Less [-]Vitamin B12 and Magnesium: a Healthy Combo for the Degradation of Trichloroethylene
2021
Marshall, Tatianna | Pensini, Erica
Zero-valent magnesium (ZVMg), glacial acetic acid (GAA), and vitamin B₁₂ were used to degrade trichloroethylene (TCE) in either pure anhydrous ethanol (EtOH) or 10% anhydrous EtOH in canola oil. Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) was used to monitor the decrease in TCE concentration within each system over time. In pure anhydrous EtOH, a vitamin B₁₂ concentration of 49.2 mg/L achieved the highest decrease in TCE concentration by 96 ± 0.4% (with lower vitamin B₁₂ concentration, degradation was lower). Vitamin B₁₂ and ZVMg also performed synergistically, increasing TCE degradation by approximately 78% relative to either ZVMg or vitamin B₁₂ alone. In pure anhydrous EtOH, with ZVMg and vitamin B₁₂, TCE was below detection after 2 h. Degradation products were likely volatile, as they were not detected in all liquid samples. Spectrophotometric analyses indicated the formation of the super reducing species of vitamin B₁₂ (i.e., Co(I)) after 30 min in the presence of ZVMg, explaining the significant increase in TCE degradation. TCE degradation was also tested in 10% anhydrous EtOH in canola oil, with the purpose of developing a formulation for the in situ remediation of TCE-polluted aquifers. Canola oil would promote ZVMg contact with TCE, while mitigating its oxidation due to contact with groundwater. In 10% anhydrous EtOH in canola oil, the concentration of TCE decreased by approximately 40% within 30 min, with ZVMg alone. Our study provides the first proof of concept of an efficient in situ remediation method using environmentally friendly reagents, such as vitamin B₁₂ and canola oil, for the degradation of TCE in polluted aquifers.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of exogenous vitamin B12 on nutrient removal and protein expression of algal-bacterial consortium
2021
Ji, Xiyan | Luo, Xin | Zhang, Jibiao | Huang, Deying
Chlorella vulgaris and Bacillus licheniformis consortium was added to synthetic wastewater with exogenous vitamin B₁₂. In the presence of 100 ng/L vitamin B₁₂, removal efficiencies of TN, NH₃-N, PO₄³—P, and COD were 80.1%, 76.8%, 87.9%, and 76.7%, respectively. The functional groups on the cell surface of the consortium, including -NH, -CH₃, C=O, C=C, and P-O-C, increased with 100 ng/L vitamin B₁₂. These functional groups improved the biological adsorption of the consortium; however, higher concentrations of vitamin B₁₂ resulted in an occlusion of the functional groups. Furthermore, there were 5 significantly enriched protein pathways, namely carbon fixation in photosynthetic organisms; amino acid metabolic pathways; the pathway of one carbon pool by folate; nitrogen metabolism; and photosynthesis. Most proteins in these pathways were upregulated, which enhanced carbon fixation and photosynthesis in the algal cells. Simultaneously, B₁₂ promoted significant upregulation of proteins associated with the quorum-sensing pathway, which promoted the interaction between algae and bacteria.
Show more [+] Less [-]Development and characterisation of a nanostructured hybrid material with vitamin B12 and bagasse-derived activated carbon for anaerobic chlordecone (Kepone) removal
2020
Ranguin, Ronald | Ncibi, Mohammed Chaker | Cesaire, Thierry | Lavoie, Serge | Jean-Marius, Corine | Grützmacher, Hansjörg | Gaspard, Sarra
Intensive use of the chlorinated pesticide chlordecone from the 1970s to 1993 to prevent crop damage in banana plantations of Guadeloupe and Martinique led to diffuse pollution of soils and surface waters, affecting both fauna and human beings in the contaminated areas. Since 2001, drinking water production plants have been equipped with filters containing activated carbon that must be treated after saturation. The objective of this work is to produce a hybrid material composed of activated carbon and vitamin B12 (VB12) for the degradation of chlordecone (CLD). The preparation of such a hybrid material is carried out by non-covalent fixation to achieve an eco-friendly solution for the serious environmental problem of contamination by chlorinated pesticides. It is thus proposed to degrade CLD by a physico-chemical treatment allowing salvage of the catalyst, which is adsorbed on the carbon surface to generate less waste that is inexpedient to treat. Activated carbon (AC) is produced locally from available sugarcane bagasse subjected to phosphoric acid activation. The main characteristics of this material are a major mesoporous structure (0.91%) and a specific (BET) surface area ranging from 1000 to 1500 m² g⁻¹. The experimental results showed that BagP1.5 has a high adsorption capacity for VB12 due to its large surface area (1403 m² g⁻¹). The binding of VB12 to the bagasse-derived AC is favoured at high temperatures. The adsorption is optimal at a pH of approximately 6. The maximum adsorption capacity of VB12 on the AC, deduced from the Langmuir model, was 306 mg g⁻¹, confirming the high affinity between the two components. The hybrid material was characterised by FTIR, Raman, X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy and SEM analysis. CLD removal by this hybrid material was faster than that by VB12 or BagP1.5 alone. The CLD degradation products were characterised by mass spectrometry.
Show more [+] Less [-]Serum folate and cobalamin levels and urinary dimethylarsinic acid in US children and adults
2018
Zhu, Jianmin | Gao, Yanhui | Sun, Dianjun | Wei, Yudan
Nutritional status could affect arsenic metabolism and toxicity in the general population chronically exposed to low levels of inorganic arsenic. In this study, we examined the association of serum folate and cobalamin with urinary concentrations of dimethylarsinic acid (DMA), the most abundant metabolite of inorganic arsenic measured in urine, in children and adults who participated in the 2003–2006 US National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys. A total of 1161 children (aged 6–19 years) and 1938 adults (aged 20–85 years) were analyzed for the association using multivariate general linear models, adjusting for potential confounders. We observed a positive association between serum levels of folate and cobalamin and creatinine-corrected urinary concentrations of DMA in both children and adults. Furthermore, serum levels of folate and cobalamin were inversely associated with homocysteine (Hcy). These results suggest that dietary intake of folate and cobalamin may exhibit protective functions against arsenic toxicity by increasing arsenic metabolism to the less toxic metabolite DMA and decreasing serum levels of Hcy.
Show more [+] Less [-]Bacterial communities associated with biofouling materials used in bench-scale hydrocarbon bioremediation
2015
Al-Mailem, Dina | Kansour, Mayada | Raḍwān, Samīr Muḥammad
Biofouling material samples from the Arabian (Persian) Gulf, used as inocula in batch cultures, brought about crude oil and pure-hydrocarbon removal in a mineral medium. Without any added nitrogen fertilizers, the hydrocarbon-removal values were between about 10 and 50 %. Fertilization with NaNO₃alone or together with a mixture of the vitamins thiamine, pyridoxine, vitamin B12, biotin, riboflavin, and folic acid increased the hydrocarbon-removal values, to reach 90 %. Biofouling material samples harbored total bacteria in the magnitude of 10⁷cells g⁻¹, about 25 % of which were hydrocarbonoclastic. These numbers were enhanced by NaNO₃and vitamin amendment. The culture-independent analysis of the total bacterioflora revealed the predominance of the gammaproteobacterial genera Marinobacter, Acinetobacter, and Alcanivorax, the Flavobacteriia, Flavobacterium, Gaetbulibacter, and Owenweeksia, and the Alphaproteobacteria Tistrella, Zavarzinia, and others. Most of those bacteria are hydrocarbonoclastic. Culture-dependent analysis of hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria revealed that Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus, Dietzia maris, and Gordonia bronchialis predominated in the fouling materials. In addition, each material had several more-specific hydrocarbonoclastic species, whose frequencies were enhanced by NaNO₃and vitamin fertilization. The same samples of fouling materials were used in four successive crude-oil-removal cycles without any dramatic loss of their hydrocarbon-removal potential nor of their associated hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria. In the fifth cycle, the oil-removal value was reduced by about 50 % in only one of the studied samples. This highlights how firmly biofouling materials were immobilizing the hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria.
Show more [+] Less [-]The roles of methanogens and acetogens in dechlorination of trichloroethene using different electron donors
2015
Wen, Li-Lian | Zhang, Yin | Pan, Ya-Wei | Wu, Wen-Qi | Meng, Shao-Hua | Zhou, Chen | Tang, Youneng | Zheng, Ping | Zhao, He-Ping
We evaluated the effects of methanogens and acetogens on the function and structure of microbial communities doing reductive dechlorination of trichloroethene (TCE) by adding four distinct electron donors: lactate, a fermentable organic; acetate, a non-fermentable organic; methanol, a fermentable 1-C (carbon) organic; and hydrogen gas (H₂), the direct electron donor for reductive dechlorination by Dehalococcoides. The fermentable electron donors had faster dechlorination rates, more complete dechlorination, and higher bacterial abundances than the non-fermentable electron donors during short-term tests. Phylotypes of Dehalococcoides were relatively abundant (≥9 %) for the cultures fed with fermentable electron donors but accounted for only ~1–2 % of the reads for the cultures fed by the non-fermentable electron donors. Routing electrons to methanogenesis and a low ratio of Dehalococcoides/methanogenesis (Dhc/mcrA) were associated with slow and incomplete reductive dechlorination with methanol and H₂. When fermentable substrates were applied as electron donors, a Dhc/mcrA ratio ≥6.4 was essential to achieve fast and complete dechlorination of TCE to ethene. When methanogenesis was suppressed using 2-bromoethanesulfonate (BES), achieving complete dechlorination of TCE to ethane required a minimum abundance of the mcrA gene. Methanobacterium appeared to be important for maintaining a high dechlorination rate, probably by providing Dehalococcoides with cofactors other than vitamin B₁₂. Furthermore, the presence of homoacetogens also was important to maintain a high dechlorination rate, because they provided acetate as Dehalococcoides’s obligatory carbon source and possibly cofactors.
Show more [+] Less [-]Multi-elemental C-Br-Cl isotope analysis for characterizing biotic and abiotic transformations of 1-bromo-2-chloroethane (BCE)
2020
Yankelzon, Irina | Englman, Tzofia | Bernstein, Anat | Siebner, Hagar | Ronen, Zeev | Gelman, Faina
Multi-elemental C-Br-Cl compound-specific isotope analysis was applied for characterizing abiotic and biotic degradation of the environmental pollutant 1-bromo-2-chloroethane (BCE). Isotope effects were determined in the model processes following hydrolytic dehalogenation and dihaloelimination pathways as well as in a microcosm experiment by the microbial culture from the contaminated site. Hydrolytic dehalogenation of BCE under alkaline conditions and by DhaA enzyme resulted in similar dual isotope slopes (ɅC/Bᵣ 21.9 ± 4.7 and 19.4 ± 1.8, respectively, and ɅC/Cₗ ~ ∞). BCE transformation by cyanocobalamin (B12) and by Sulfurospirillum multivorans followed dihaloelimination and was accompanied by identical, within the uncertainty range, dual isotope slopes (ɅC/Bᵣ 8.4 ± 1.7 and 7.9 ± 4.2, respectively, and ɅC/Cₗ 2.4 ± 0.3 and 1.5 ± 0.6, respectively). Changes over time in the isotope composition of BCE from the contaminated groundwater showed only a slight variation in δ¹³C values and were not sufficient for the elucidation of the BCE degradation pathway in situ. However, an anaerobic microcosm experiment with the enrichment cultures from the contaminated groundwater presented dual isotope slopes similar to the hydrolytic pathway, suggesting that the potential for BCE degradation in situ by the hydrolytic dehalogenation pathway exists in the contaminated site.
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