4.8 Article

Microbial Roles in Dissolved Organic Matter Transformation in Full-Scale Wastewater Treatment Processes Revealed by Reactomics and Comparative Genomics

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 16, Pages 11294-11307

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c02584

Keywords

dissolved organic matter transformation; wastewater treatment; sludge microbe

Funding

  1. Jiangsu Natural Science Foundation of China [BK20180010, BE2020686]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [51978327, 21677071]
  3. National Water Pollution Control and Governance of Science and Technology Major Special [2017ZX07202003]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Microbe-mediated DOM transformation during wastewater treatment significantly increases DOM's aromaticity and unsaturation, diversifying DOM richness and generating nitrogenous and sulfur-containing compounds through oxidoreduction, functional group transfer, and bond formation. Network analysis shows microbial division of labor in DOM transformation with hub microbes correlated to liable DOM consumption and recalcitrant compound transformation, while peripheral degraders may feed on hub microbe metabolites. Developing technologies to selectively enrich peripheral degraders may advance DOM removal by decoupling liable and recalcitrant DOM transformation processes.
Understanding the degradation of dissolved organic matter (DOM) is vital for optimizing DOM control. However, the microbe-mediated DOM transformation during wastewater treatment remains poorly characterized. Here, microbes and DOM along full-scale biotreatment processes were simultaneously characterized using comparative genomics and high-resolution mass spectrometry-based reactomics. Biotreatments significantly increased DOM's aromaticity and unsaturation due to the overproduced lignin and polyphenol analogs. DOM was diversified by over five times in richness, with thousands of nitrogenous and sulfur-containing compounds generated through microbe-mediated oxidoreduction, functional group transfer, and C-N and C-S bond formation. Network analysis demonstrated microbial division of labor in DOM transformation. However, their roles were determined by their functional traits rather than taxa. Specifically, network and module hubs exhibited rapid growth potentials and broad substrate affinities but were deficient in xenobiotics- metabolism-associated genes. They were mainly correlated to liable DOM consumption and its transformation to recalcitrant compounds. In contrast, connectors and peripherals were potential degraders of recalcitrant DOM but slow in growth. They showed specialized associations with fewer DOM molecules and probably fed on metabolites of hub microbes. Thus, developing technologies (e.g., carriers) to selectively enrich peripheral degraders and consequently decouple the liable and recalcitrant DOM transformation processes may advance DOM removal.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available