Cargando…

A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters

The formation of dense, well-settling methanogenic granules is essential for the operation of high-rate, up-flow anaerobic bioreactors used for wastewater treatment. Granule formation (granulation) mechanisms have been previously proposed, but an ecological understanding of granule formation is stil...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mills, Simon, Trego, Anna Christine, Lens, Piet N. L., Ijaz, Umer Zeeshan, Collins, Gavin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8579839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34756083
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/Spectrum.00784-21
_version_ 1784596504755830784
author Mills, Simon
Trego, Anna Christine
Lens, Piet N. L.
Ijaz, Umer Zeeshan
Collins, Gavin
author_facet Mills, Simon
Trego, Anna Christine
Lens, Piet N. L.
Ijaz, Umer Zeeshan
Collins, Gavin
author_sort Mills, Simon
collection PubMed
description The formation of dense, well-settling methanogenic granules is essential for the operation of high-rate, up-flow anaerobic bioreactors used for wastewater treatment. Granule formation (granulation) mechanisms have been previously proposed, but an ecological understanding of granule formation is still lacking. Additionally, much of the current research on granulation only examines the start-up phase of bioreactor operation, rather than monitoring the fate of established granules and how new granules emerge over time. This paper, therefore, attempts to provide an insight into the microbial ecology of granule formation outside the start-up phase of bioreactor operation and develop an ecological granulation model. The microbial communities of granules actively undergoing growth, breakage, and reformation were examined, and an ecological granulation model was proposed. A distinct pregranular microbial community, with a high proportion of acidogenic organisms, such as the Streptococcaceae, was identified and suggested to have a role in initiating granulation by providing simpler substrates for the methanogenic and syntrophic communities which developed during granule growth. After initial granule formation, deterministic influences on microbial community assembly increased with granule size and indicated that microbial community succession was influenced by granule growth, leading to the formation of a stepwise ecological model for granulation. IMPORTANCE Complex microbial communities in engineered environments can aggregate to form surface-attached biofilms. Others form suspended biofilms, such as methanogenic granules. The formation of dense, methanogenic granules underpins the performance of high-rate, anaerobic bioreactors in industrial wastewater treatment. Granule formation (granulation) has been well studied from a physico-chemical perspective, but the ecological basis is poorly understood. We identified a distinct, flocculent, microbial community, which was present alongside granules, comprising primary consumers likely key in providing simpler substrates to granules. This flocculent community is understudied in anaerobic digestion and may initiate, or perpetuate, granule formation. We propose that it may be possible to influence bioreactor performance (e.g., to regulate volatile fatty acid concentrations) by manipulating this community. The patterns of microbial community diversity and assembly revealed by the study indicate that cycles of granule growth and breakage lead to overall diversification of the bioreactor meta-community, with implications for bioreactor process stability.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8579839
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher American Society for Microbiology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-85798392021-11-12 A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters Mills, Simon Trego, Anna Christine Lens, Piet N. L. Ijaz, Umer Zeeshan Collins, Gavin Microbiol Spectr Research Article The formation of dense, well-settling methanogenic granules is essential for the operation of high-rate, up-flow anaerobic bioreactors used for wastewater treatment. Granule formation (granulation) mechanisms have been previously proposed, but an ecological understanding of granule formation is still lacking. Additionally, much of the current research on granulation only examines the start-up phase of bioreactor operation, rather than monitoring the fate of established granules and how new granules emerge over time. This paper, therefore, attempts to provide an insight into the microbial ecology of granule formation outside the start-up phase of bioreactor operation and develop an ecological granulation model. The microbial communities of granules actively undergoing growth, breakage, and reformation were examined, and an ecological granulation model was proposed. A distinct pregranular microbial community, with a high proportion of acidogenic organisms, such as the Streptococcaceae, was identified and suggested to have a role in initiating granulation by providing simpler substrates for the methanogenic and syntrophic communities which developed during granule growth. After initial granule formation, deterministic influences on microbial community assembly increased with granule size and indicated that microbial community succession was influenced by granule growth, leading to the formation of a stepwise ecological model for granulation. IMPORTANCE Complex microbial communities in engineered environments can aggregate to form surface-attached biofilms. Others form suspended biofilms, such as methanogenic granules. The formation of dense, methanogenic granules underpins the performance of high-rate, anaerobic bioreactors in industrial wastewater treatment. Granule formation (granulation) has been well studied from a physico-chemical perspective, but the ecological basis is poorly understood. We identified a distinct, flocculent, microbial community, which was present alongside granules, comprising primary consumers likely key in providing simpler substrates to granules. This flocculent community is understudied in anaerobic digestion and may initiate, or perpetuate, granule formation. We propose that it may be possible to influence bioreactor performance (e.g., to regulate volatile fatty acid concentrations) by manipulating this community. The patterns of microbial community diversity and assembly revealed by the study indicate that cycles of granule growth and breakage lead to overall diversification of the bioreactor meta-community, with implications for bioreactor process stability. American Society for Microbiology 2021-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8579839/ /pubmed/34756083 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/Spectrum.00784-21 Text en Copyright © 2021 Mills et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Mills, Simon
Trego, Anna Christine
Lens, Piet N. L.
Ijaz, Umer Zeeshan
Collins, Gavin
A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters
title A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters
title_full A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters
title_fullStr A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters
title_full_unstemmed A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters
title_short A Distinct, Flocculent, Acidogenic Microbial Community Accompanies Methanogenic Granules in Anaerobic Digesters
title_sort distinct, flocculent, acidogenic microbial community accompanies methanogenic granules in anaerobic digesters
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8579839/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34756083
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/Spectrum.00784-21
work_keys_str_mv AT millssimon adistinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT tregoannachristine adistinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT lenspietnl adistinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT ijazumerzeeshan adistinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT collinsgavin adistinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT millssimon distinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT tregoannachristine distinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT lenspietnl distinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT ijazumerzeeshan distinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters
AT collinsgavin distinctflocculentacidogenicmicrobialcommunityaccompaniesmethanogenicgranulesinanaerobicdigesters