4.8 Article

Resilience of organohalide-detoxifying microbial community to oxygen stress in sewage sludge

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2022.119055

Keywords

Sewage sludge; Microbial reductive dehalogenation; Organohalide pollutants; Oxygen stress; Community resilience; Microbial ecology

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Singapore
  2. [MOE-000033-01]
  3. [R-302-000-239-114]

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Organohalide pollutants are prevalent and harmful in the environment. This study shows that sewage sludge microbial communities exhibit exceptional resistance and resilience to oxygen stress, attenuating the effects of different organohalide pollutants. Microbial community analysis reveals the resilience of these communities to oxygen stress.
Organohalide pollutants are prevalent in the environment, causing harms to wildlife and human. Organohalide-respiring bacteria (OHRB) could detoxify these pollutants in anaerobic environments, but the most competent OHRB (i.e., Dehalococcoides) is susceptible to oxygen. This study reports exceptional resistance and resilience of sewage sludge microbial communities to oxygen stress for attenuation of structurally distinct organohalide pollutants, including tetrachloroethene, tetrabromobisphenol A, and polybrominated diphenyl ethers. The dehalogenation rate constant of these organohalide pollutants in oxygen-exposed sludge microcosms was maintained as 74-120% as that in the control without oxygen exposure. Subsequent top-down experiments clarified that sludge flocs and non-OHRB contributed to alleviating oxygen stress on OHRB. In the dehaloge-nating microcosms, multiple OHRB (Dehahlococcoides, Dehalogenimonas, and Sulfurospirillum) harboring distinct reductive dehalogenase genes (pceA, pteA, tceA, vcrA, and bdeA) collaborated to detoxify organohalide pollutants but responded differentially to oxygen stress. Comprehensive microbial community analyses (taxonomy, di-versity, and structure) demonstrated certain resilience of the sludge-derived dehalogenating microbial com-munities to oxygen stress. Additionally, microbial co-occurrence networks were intensified by oxygen stress in most microcosms, as a possible stress mitigation strategy. Altogether the mechanistic and ecological findings in this study contribute to remediation of organohalide-contaminated sites encountering oxygen disturbance.

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