4.8 Article

Integrated Metagenomic and Metaproteomic Analyses Unravel Ammonia Toxicity to Active Methanogens and Syntrophs, Enzyme Synthesis, and Key Enzymes in Anaerobic Digestion

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 21, Pages 14817-14827

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c00797

Keywords

anaerobic digestion; ammonia toxicity; active microbiome; enzyme synthesis; integrated metagenomic and metaproteomic analyses

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51778454, 51425802]

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The study revealed that ammonia not only inhibited the growth of methanogenic bacteria, but also reduced the biotransformations of propionate and butyrate into methane, as well as restrained the synthesis of key enzymes involved in the anaerobic digestion process.
During anaerobic digestion, the active microbiome synthesizes enzymes by transcription and translation, and then enzymes catalyze multistep bioconversions of substrates before methane being produced. However, little information is available on how ammonia affects truly active microbes containing the expressed enzymes, enzyme synthesis, and key enzymes. In this study, an integrated metagenomic and metaproteomic investigation showed that ammonia suppressed not only the obligate acetotrophic methanogens but also the syntrophic propionate and butyrate oxidation taxa and their assistant bacteria (genus Desulfovibrio), which declined the biotransformations of propionate and butyrate -> acetate -> methane. Although the total population of the hydrolyzing and acidifying bacteria was not affected by ammonia, the bacteria with ammonia resistance increased. Our study also revealed that ammonia restrained the enzyme synthesis process by inhibiting the RNA polymerase (subunits A' and D) during transcription and the ribosome (large (L3, L12, L13, L22, and L25) and small (S3, S3Ae, and S7) ribosomal subunits) and aminoacyl-tRNA synthesis (aspartate-tRNA synthetase) in translation. Further investigation suggested that methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, acetyl-CoA C-acetyltransferase, and CH3-CoM reductase, which regulate propionate and butyrate oxidation and acetoclastic methanation, were significantly downregulated by ammonia. This study provides intrinsic insights into the fundamental mechanisms of how ammonia inhibits anaerobic digestion.

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