4.5 Article

Co- inoculating ruminal content neither provides active hydrolytic microbes nor improves methanization of 13 C- cellulose in batch digesters

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 87, Issue 3, Pages 616-629

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/1574-6941.12249

Keywords

anaerobic digestion; stable isotope probing; pyrosequencing; fingerprinting

Categories

Funding

  1. R2DS program of the Region Ile de France
  2. CPER-LABE program
  3. [ANR-09-BIOE-06-02-DANAC]

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Cellulose hydrolysis often limits the kinetics and efficiency of anaerobic degradation in industrial digesters. In animal digestive systems, specialized microorganisms enable cellulose biodegradation at significantly higher rates. This study aims to assess the potential of ruminal microbial communities to settle and to express their cellulolytic properties in anaerobic digesters. Cellulose-degrading batch incubations were co-inoculated with municipal solid waste digester sludge and ruminal content. C-13-labeled cellulose degradation was described over time with Gas Chromatography-Combustion-Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry. Results were linked to the identification of the microorganisms assimilating C-13 and to the monitoring of their relative dynamics. Cellulose degradation in co-inoculated incubations was efficient but not significantly improved. Transient disturbances in degradation pathways occurred, as revealed by propionate accumulation. Automated Ribosomal Intergenic Spacer Analysis dynamics and pyrosequencing revealed that expected classes of Bacteria and Archaea were active and degraded cellulose. However, despite the favorable co-inoculation conditions, molecular tools also revealed that no ruminal species settled in the bioreactors. Other specific parameters were probably needed for this to happen. This study shows that exploiting the rumen's cellulolytic properties in anaerobic digesters is not straightforward. Co-inoculation can only be successful if ruminal microorganisms manage to thrive in the anaerobic digester and outcompete native microorganisms, which requires specific nutritional and environmental parameters, and a meticulous reproduction of the selection pressure encountered in the rumen.

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