4.7 Article

Activated sludge microbiome with H2O2-modified biochar enhances the treatment resilience and detoxification of oxytetracycline and its toxic byproducts

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 236, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2023.116832

Keywords

Oxytetracycline; Biochar; Adsorption; Biodegradation; Detoxification; Toxicity

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The study demonstrated the beneficial role of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-pretreated biochar (BC) in an activated sludge (AS) bioprocess for the removal and detoxification of oxytetracycline (OTC) and its byproducts. The BC addition significantly enhanced the OTC removal rates, system functioning, and reduction of toxicity. Additionally, novel bacterial populations closely related to OTC degradation were identified.
The widespread presence of oxytetracycline (OTC) in aquatic ecosystems poses both health risks and ecological concerns. The present study revealed the beneficial role of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-pretreated biochar (BC) derived from agricultural hardwood waste in an activated sludge (AS) bioprocess. The BC addition significantly enhanced the removal and detoxification of OTC and its byproducts. BC was initially modified using H2O2 to improve its OTC adsorption. Two AS reactors were then established, one with H2O2-modified BC and one without, and both were exposed to OTC. The BC-added reactor exhibited significantly higher OTC removal rates during both the start-up (0.97 d-1) and steady-state (0.98 d-1) phases than the reactor without BC (0.54 d-1 and 0.83 d-1, respectively). Two novel transformation pathways for OTC were proposed, with four byproducts originating from OTC identified, some of which were found to be more toxic than OTC itself. The BC-added reactor had significantly higher system functioning in terms of its heterotrophic activity and the reduction of the toxicity of OTC and its byproducts, as illustrated by structure-based toxicity simulations, antimicrobial susceptibility experiments, analytical chemistry, and bioinformatics analysis. Bioinformatics revealed two novel bacterial populations closely related to the known OTC-degrader Pandoraea. The ecophysiology and selective enrichment of these populations suggested their role in the enzymatic breakdown and detoxification of OTC (e.g., via demethylation and hydrogenation). Overall, the present study highlighted the beneficial role of H2O2- modified BC in combination with the AS microbiome in terms of enhancing treatment performance and resil-ience, reducing the toxicological disruption to biodiversity, and detoxifying micropollutants.

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