Effects of sulphur amino acids on the size and structure of microbial communities of aerobic granular sludge bioreactors
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rosa Masegosa, Aurora; Pérez Bou, Lizandra; Muñoz Palazón, Barbara; Monteoliva Garcia, Antonio; González Martínez, Alejandro; González López, Jesús Juan; Correa Galeote, DavidEditorial
Springer
Materia
Cysteine Methionine qPCR Illumina sequencing N-removal AGS-SBR
Fecha
2022-05-25Referencia bibliográfica
Rosa-Masegosa, A... [et al.]. Effects of sulphur amino acids on the size and structure of microbial communities of aerobic granular sludge bioreactors. Amino Acids (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-022-03168-y]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Education and Professional Fomation,FPU programme; Carolina Foundation; National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia; German Research Foundation (DFG); Aurora Rosa-Masegosa; Universidad de Granada/CBUAResumen
Granular activated sludge has been described as a promising tool in treating wastewater. However, the effect of high concentrations
of sulphur amino acids, cysteine and methionine, in the evolution, development and stability of AGS-SBRs (aerobic
granular sludge in sequential batch reactors) and their microbial communities is not well-established. Therefore, this study
aimed to evaluate microbial communities' size, structure and dynamics in two AGS-SBRs fed with two different concentrations
of amino acids (50 and 100 mg L−
1 of both amino acids). In addition, the impact of the higher level of amino acids
was also determined under an acclimatization or shock strategy. While N removal efficiency decreased with amino acids,
the removal of the organic matter was generally satisfactory. Moreover, the abrupt presence of both amino acids reduced
even further the removal performance of N, whereas under progressive adaptation, the removal yield was higher. Besides,
excellent removal rates of cysteine and methionine elimination were found, in all stages below 80% of the influent values.
Generally considered, the addition of amino acids weakly impacts the microbial communities' total abundances. On the contrary,
the presence of amino acids sharply modulated the dominant bacterial structures. Furthermore, the highest amino acid
concentration under the shock strategy resulted in a severe change in the structure of the microbial community. Acidovorax,
Flavobacterium, Methylophilus, Stenotrophomonas and Thauera stood out as the prominent bacteria to cope with the high
presence of cysteine and methionine. Hence, the AGS-SBR technology is valuable for treating influents enriched in sulphur
Aa inclusively when a shock strategy was used.