4.7 Article

New insights into the effect of ethanol and volatile fatty acids proportions on methanogenic activities and pathways

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 194, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110644

Keywords

Direct interspecies electron transfer; Ethanol; Metagenomics; Methanogenesis; Microbial community

Funding

  1. Shenzhen Science and Technology Innovation Committee [JCYJ20170817161106801]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51878371]

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This study investigated the effects of intermediates acetate, propionate, and ethanol on methanogenesis. Ethanol was found to be the easiest intermediate to be biodegraded, enhancing methane production rate. Different microbial communities and syntrophic patterns were observed in four reactors, with different bacteria playing important roles in different reactors.
During anaerobic digestion, methanogenic activities and pathways can be affected by intermediates. Here, the effects of intermediates acetate, propionate, and ethanol on methanogenesis were investigated. Four anaerobic sequencing batch reactors were acclimated with propionate (ASBR_P), ethanol/propionate (ASBR_EP), acetate/ propionate (ASBR_AP), and ethanol/acetate/propionate (ASBR_EAP). Ethanol was the easiest one to be biodegraded, thereby enhancing the maximum methane production rate and shortening the lag phase, while the longest acclimation time and lowest methane production rate were observed in ASBR_P. Different microbial communities and syntrophic patterns existed in four reactors. Desulfovibrio and Geobacter were the dominant ethanol-oxidizing bacteria in ASBR_EP and ASBR_EAP, respectively. Both Desulfovibrio and Geobacter possessed the potential of extracellular electron transfer, which might be the advantage of ethanol dosage for enhancing methanogenesis through direct interspecies electron transfer. Methanosarcina was enriched in ASBR_P and ASBR_AP, while Methanosaeta in ASBR_EP and ASBR_EAP. Genes responsible for acetoclastic methanogenesis were significantly enriched in ASBR_EAP, possibly resulting in the highest methanogenic activity from acetate. Results from this study will advance the optimization of practical anaerobic systems, which can be achieved by regulating the intermediates with different fermenting pathways.

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