4.3 Article

Phylogenetic Diversity of Microorganisms from the Sludge of a Biogas Reactor Processing Oil-Containing and Municipal Waste

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 87, Issue 3, Pages 416-424

Publisher

MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1134/S0026261718030074

Keywords

biogas reactor; microbial community; high-throughput sequencing; the 16S rRNA gene; pathogenic bacteria; oil oxidation; fermenting bacteria; methanogens; MEOR

Categories

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [16-14-00028]

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High-throughput sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene fragments was used to determine the phylogenetic diversity of prokaryotes, including human pathogens, in the liquid phase of the sludge of a biogas reactor processing oil-containing and municipal waste. A unique microbial community was found to develop in the sludge, which comprised the microorganisms of municipal wastewater (bacteria of human feces) and specific groups of aerobic and anaerobic microorganisms, which possibly arrived with oil-containing water. In the 16S rRNA gene library, the sequences of representatives of Firmicutes prevailed (54.9%), which belonged to anaerobic bacteria of the genera Gelria (26.6%), Syntrophomonas (6.0%), Lutispora (2.0%), and uncultured Clostridia (group MBA03, 11.1%). The Proteobacteria sequences (20.7%) belonged mostly to the metabolically diverse members of the genus Pseudomonas (13.8%). The phylum Bacteroidetes (7%) was represented by uncultured bacteria (VadinBC27 wastewater-sludge group), while members of the phylum Cloacimonetes were mainly syntrophic bacteria Candidatus Cloacamonas (7.5%). The sequences of bacteria commonly occurring in oilfields (Clostridia, Anaerolinea, Bacteroidetes, sulfate-reducing Deltaproteobacteria, members of the family Syntrophaceae, and of the genera Thauera, Pseudomonas, Dechloromonas, and Petrimonas) were revealed. No sequences of bacteria known to be pathogenic to humans were found. The cultured microorganisms were aerobic organotrophic and anaerobic fermenting, denitrifying, and methanogenic prokaryotes. Fermenting and methanogenic enrichments grew on a broad range of organic substrates (sucrose, glycerol, starch), producing volatile fatty acids (acetate, n-butyrate, and propionate), gases (De(2), DD2, and CH4), and decreasing pH of the medium from 7.0 to 4.5-5.0. The possible application of the biogas reactor sludge as a source of fermenting and methanogenic anaerobic prokaryotes, as well as of aerobic hydrocarbonoxidizing bacteria for oilfield introduction and for production of new preparations for enhanced oil recovery and for bioremediation of oil contamination is discussed.

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