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Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems

The knowledge about the members of active archaea communities in DWDS is limited. The current understanding is based on high-throughput 16S ribosomal RNA gene (DNA-based) amplicon sequencing that reveals the diversity of active, dormant, and dead members of the prokaryote (bacteria, archaea) communi...

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Autores principales: Inkinen, Jenni, Siponen, Sallamaari, Jayaprakash, Balamuralikrishna, Tiwari, Ananda, Hokajärvi, Anna-Maria, Pursiainen, Anna, Ikonen, Jenni, Kauppinen, Ari, Miettinen, Ilkka T., Paananen, Jussi, Torvinen, Eila, Kolehmainen, Mikko, Pitkänen, Tarja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8131914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34027378
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wroa.2021.100101
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author Inkinen, Jenni
Siponen, Sallamaari
Jayaprakash, Balamuralikrishna
Tiwari, Ananda
Hokajärvi, Anna-Maria
Pursiainen, Anna
Ikonen, Jenni
Kauppinen, Ari
Miettinen, Ilkka T.
Paananen, Jussi
Torvinen, Eila
Kolehmainen, Mikko
Pitkänen, Tarja
author_facet Inkinen, Jenni
Siponen, Sallamaari
Jayaprakash, Balamuralikrishna
Tiwari, Ananda
Hokajärvi, Anna-Maria
Pursiainen, Anna
Ikonen, Jenni
Kauppinen, Ari
Miettinen, Ilkka T.
Paananen, Jussi
Torvinen, Eila
Kolehmainen, Mikko
Pitkänen, Tarja
author_sort Inkinen, Jenni
collection PubMed
description The knowledge about the members of active archaea communities in DWDS is limited. The current understanding is based on high-throughput 16S ribosomal RNA gene (DNA-based) amplicon sequencing that reveals the diversity of active, dormant, and dead members of the prokaryote (bacteria, archaea) communities. The sequencing primers optimized for bacteria community analysis may underestimate the share of the archaea community. This study characterized archaea communities at five full-scale drinking water distribution systems (DWDS), representing a variety of drinking water production units (A-E); A&B use artificially recharged non-disinfected groundwater (ARG), the other DWDS's supplied water disinfected by using ultraviolet (UV) light and chlorine compounds, C&D were surface waterworks and E was a ground waterworks. For the first time for archaea community analyses, this study employed the archaea-specific high-throughput sequencing primers for 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) as a target (reverse-transcribed cDNA; an RNA-based approach) in addition to the previously used 16S rRNA gene target (rDNA; a DNA-based approach) to reveal the active fraction of the archaea present in DWDS. The archaea community structure in varying environmental conditions in the water and biofilm of the five DWDSs were investigated by taking into consideration the system properties (cold or hot water system) and water age (distance from the treatment plants) in samples from each season of one year. The RNA-based archaea amplicon reads were obtained mostly from cold water samples from DWDSs (A–B) distributing water without disinfection where the DNA-based and RNA-based analysis created separate clusters in a weighted beta-diversity analysis. The season and location in DWDS A further affected the diversity of these archaea communities as was seen by different clusters in beta-diversity plots. The recovery of archaea reads was not adequate for analysis in any of the disinfected samples in DWDSs C–E or non-disinfected hot water in DWDSs A–B when utilizing RNA-based template. The metabolically active archaea community of DWDSs thus seemed to be effectively controlled by disinfection of water and in the hot water systems by the temperature. All biofilms regardless of DWDS showed lower species richness values (mainly Nitrososphaeria class) than non-disinfected water from DWDSs A–B where several archaea classes occurred (e.g. Woesearchaeia, Nitrososphaeria, Micrarchaeia, Methanomicrobia, Iairchaeia, Bathyarchaeia) indicating only part of the archaea members were able to survive in biofilms. Thus, Archaea has been shown as a significant part of normal DWDS biota, and their role especially in non-disinfected DWDS may be more important than previously considered.
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spelling pubmed-81319142021-05-21 Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems Inkinen, Jenni Siponen, Sallamaari Jayaprakash, Balamuralikrishna Tiwari, Ananda Hokajärvi, Anna-Maria Pursiainen, Anna Ikonen, Jenni Kauppinen, Ari Miettinen, Ilkka T. Paananen, Jussi Torvinen, Eila Kolehmainen, Mikko Pitkänen, Tarja Water Res X Full Paper The knowledge about the members of active archaea communities in DWDS is limited. The current understanding is based on high-throughput 16S ribosomal RNA gene (DNA-based) amplicon sequencing that reveals the diversity of active, dormant, and dead members of the prokaryote (bacteria, archaea) communities. The sequencing primers optimized for bacteria community analysis may underestimate the share of the archaea community. This study characterized archaea communities at five full-scale drinking water distribution systems (DWDS), representing a variety of drinking water production units (A-E); A&B use artificially recharged non-disinfected groundwater (ARG), the other DWDS's supplied water disinfected by using ultraviolet (UV) light and chlorine compounds, C&D were surface waterworks and E was a ground waterworks. For the first time for archaea community analyses, this study employed the archaea-specific high-throughput sequencing primers for 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) as a target (reverse-transcribed cDNA; an RNA-based approach) in addition to the previously used 16S rRNA gene target (rDNA; a DNA-based approach) to reveal the active fraction of the archaea present in DWDS. The archaea community structure in varying environmental conditions in the water and biofilm of the five DWDSs were investigated by taking into consideration the system properties (cold or hot water system) and water age (distance from the treatment plants) in samples from each season of one year. The RNA-based archaea amplicon reads were obtained mostly from cold water samples from DWDSs (A–B) distributing water without disinfection where the DNA-based and RNA-based analysis created separate clusters in a weighted beta-diversity analysis. The season and location in DWDS A further affected the diversity of these archaea communities as was seen by different clusters in beta-diversity plots. The recovery of archaea reads was not adequate for analysis in any of the disinfected samples in DWDSs C–E or non-disinfected hot water in DWDSs A–B when utilizing RNA-based template. The metabolically active archaea community of DWDSs thus seemed to be effectively controlled by disinfection of water and in the hot water systems by the temperature. All biofilms regardless of DWDS showed lower species richness values (mainly Nitrososphaeria class) than non-disinfected water from DWDSs A–B where several archaea classes occurred (e.g. Woesearchaeia, Nitrososphaeria, Micrarchaeia, Methanomicrobia, Iairchaeia, Bathyarchaeia) indicating only part of the archaea members were able to survive in biofilms. Thus, Archaea has been shown as a significant part of normal DWDS biota, and their role especially in non-disinfected DWDS may be more important than previously considered. Elsevier 2021-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8131914/ /pubmed/34027378 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wroa.2021.100101 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full Paper
Inkinen, Jenni
Siponen, Sallamaari
Jayaprakash, Balamuralikrishna
Tiwari, Ananda
Hokajärvi, Anna-Maria
Pursiainen, Anna
Ikonen, Jenni
Kauppinen, Ari
Miettinen, Ilkka T.
Paananen, Jussi
Torvinen, Eila
Kolehmainen, Mikko
Pitkänen, Tarja
Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
title Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
title_full Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
title_fullStr Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
title_full_unstemmed Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
title_short Diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–Less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
title_sort diverse and active archaea communities occur in non-disinfected drinking water systems–less activity revealed in disinfected and hot water systems
topic Full Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8131914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34027378
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wroa.2021.100101
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