4.6 Article

Casimicrobium huifangae gen. nov., sp. nov., a Ubiquitous Most-Wanted Core Bacterial Taxon from Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 86, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.02209-19

Keywords

Casimicrobium huifangae; activated sludge microbiome; core taxa; microbial network; municipal wastewater treatment plant; WWTP; nitrogen and phosphorus removal

Funding

  1. Microbiome Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [KFZD-SW-219-3]
  2. NSFC-EU Environmental Biotechnology joint program [31861133002]
  3. EU-China Flagship Initiative on Biotechnologies for Environment and Human Health (the ELECTRA project from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program) [826244]

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Microorganisms in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) play a key role in the removal of pollutants from municipal and industrial wastewaters. A recent study estimated that activated sludge from global municipal WWTPs harbors 1 x 10(9) to 2 x 10(9) microbial species, the majority of which have not yet been cultivated, and 28 core taxa were identified as most-wanted ones (L Wu, D. Ning, B. Zhang, Y. Li, et al., Nat Microbiol 4:1183-1195, 2019, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564 -019-0426-5). Cultivation and characterization of the most-wanted core bacteria are critical to understand their genetic, physiological, phylogenetic, and ecological traits, as well as to improve the performance of WWTPs. In this study, we isolated a bacterial strain, designated SJ-1, that represents a novel cluster within Betaproteobacteria and corresponds to OTU_16 within the 28 core taxa in the most-wanted list. Strain SJ-1 was identified and nominated as Casimicrobium huifangae gen. nov., sp. nov., of a novel family, Casimicrobiaceae. C. huifangae is ubiquitously distributed and is metabolically versatile. In addition to mineralizing various carbon sources (including carbohydrates, aromatic compounds, and short-chain fatty acids), C. huifangae is capable of nitrate reduction and phosphorus accumulation. The population of C. huifangae accounted for more than 1% of the bacterial population of the activated sludge microbiome from the Qinghe WWTP, which showed seasonal dynamic changes. Cooccurrence analysis suggested that C. huifangae was an important module hub in the bacterial network of Qinghe WWTP. IMPORTANCE The activated sludge process is the most widely applied biotechnology and is one of the best ecosystems to address microbial ecological principles. Yet, the cultivation of core bacteria and the exploration of their physiology and ecology are limited. In this study, the core and novel bacterial taxon C. huifangae was cultivated and characterized. This study revealed that C. huifangae functioned as an important module hub in the activated sludge microbiome, and it potentially plays an important role in municipal wastewater treatment plants.

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