4.7 Article

Construction of synthetic anti-fouling consortia: fouling control effects and polysaccharide degradation mechanisms

Journal

MICROBIAL CELL FACTORIES
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12934-023-02235-7

Keywords

Membrane bioreactors; Membrane fouling; Biofilm formation; Synthetic anti-fouling consortia; Polysaccharide

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This study demonstrates the feasibility and benefits of using a synthetic anti-fouling consortium (SAC) for fouling control in membrane bioreactors. The co-cultivation of SAC with sludge significantly mitigates fouling, increases sludge floc size, and decreases the unified membrane fouling index value. The extracellular secretions of SAC inhibit biofilm formation and disperse existing biofilm.
The physical states and chemical components of bulk sludge determine the occurrence and development of membrane fouling in membrane bioreactors. Thus, regulation of sludge suspensions can provide new strategies for fouling control. In this study, we used top-down enrichment to construct a synthetic anti-fouling consortium (SAC) from bio-cake and evaluate its roles in preventing membrane fouling. The SAC was identified as Massilia-dominated and could almost wholly degrade the alginate solution (1,000 mg/L) within 72 h. Two-dimensional Fourier transformation infrared correlation spectroscopy (2D-FTIR-CoS) analysis demonstrated that the SAC induced the breakage of glycosidic bond in alginates. The co-cultivation of sludge with a low dosage of SAC (ranging from 0 to 1%) led to significant fouling mitigation, increased sludge floc size, and decreased unified membrane fouling index value (0.55 +/- 0.06 and 0.11 +/- 0.05). FTIR spectra and X-ray spectroscopy analyses demonstrated that the addition of SAC decreased the abundance of the O-acetylation of polysaccharides in extracellular polymeric substances. Secondary derivatives analysis of amide I spectra suggested a strong reduction in the alpha-helix/(beta-sheet + random coil) ratio in the presence of SAC, which was expected to enhance cell aggregation. Additionally, the extracellular secretions of SAC could both inhibit biofilm formation and strongly disperse the existing biofilm strongly during the biofilm incubation tests. In summary, this study illustrates the feasibility and benefits of using SAC for fouling control and provides a new strategy for fouling control.

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