Insight into the organic matter degradation enhancement in the bioelectrochemically-assisted sludge treatment wetland: Transformation of the organic matter and microbial community evolution

Chemosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 133259
Author(s):  
Shutian Wang ◽  
Qingliang Zhao ◽  
Junqiu Jiang ◽  
Kun Wang
Author(s):  
Hapsari Puspitaloka ◽  
Hiroshi Mimoto ◽  
Quyen Ngoc Minh Tran ◽  
Mitsuhiko Koyama ◽  
Kiyohiko Nakasaki

2016 ◽  
Vol 82 (14) ◽  
pp. 4232-4243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Tully ◽  
John F. Heidelberg

ABSTRACTThe South Pacific Gyre (SPG) possesses the lowest rates of sedimentation, surface chlorophyll concentration, and primary productivity in the global oceans. As a direct result, deep-sea sediments are thin and contain small amounts of labile organic carbon. It was recently shown that the entire SPG sediment column is oxygenated and may be representative of up to a third of the global marine environment. To understand the microbial processes that contribute to the removal of the labile organic matter at the water-sediment interface, a sediment sample was collected and subjected to metagenomic sequencing and analyses. Analysis of nine partially reconstructed environmental genomes, which represent approximately one-third of the microbial community, revealed that the members of the SPG surface sediment microbial community are phylogenetically distinct from surface/upper-ocean organisms. These genomes represent a wide distribution of novel organisms, including deep-branchingAlphaproteobacteria, two novel organisms within theProteobacteria, and new members of theNitrospirae,Nitrospinae, and candidate phylum NC10. These genomes contain evidence for microbially mediated metal (iron/manganese) oxidation and carbon fixation linked to nitrification. Additionally, despite hypothesized energy limitation, members of the SPG microbial community had motility and chemotaxis genes and possessed mechanisms for the degradation of high-molecular-weight organic matter. This study contributes to our understanding of the metabolic potential of microorganisms in deep-sea oligotrophic sediments and their impact on local carbon geochemistry.IMPORTANCEThis research provides insight into the microbial metabolic potential of organisms inhabiting oxygenated deep-sea marine sediments. Current estimates suggest that these environments account for up to a third of the global marine sediment habitat. Nine novel deep-sea microbial genomes were reconstructed from a metagenomic data set and expand the limited number of environmental genomes from deep-sea sediment environments. This research provides phylogeny-linked insight into critical metabolisms, including carbon fixation associated with nitrification, which is assignable to members of the marine group 1Thaumarchaeota,Nitrospinae, andNitrospiraeand neutrophilic metal (iron/manganese) oxidation assignable to a novel proteobacterium.


2019 ◽  
Vol 671 ◽  
pp. 1237-1244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kiyohiko Nakasaki ◽  
Hidehira Hirai ◽  
Hiroshi Mimoto ◽  
Tran Ngoc Minh Quyen ◽  
Mitsuhiko Koyama ◽  
...  

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