4.8 Article

Molecular mechanisms through which different carbon sources affect denitrification by Thauera linaloolentis: Electron generation, transfer, and competition

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 170, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2022.107598

Keywords

Carbon source; Denitrification; Thauera linaloolentis; Molecular mechanism; Electron transport system

Funding

  1. National Special Project for Science and Technology on Water Pollution Control and Management
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
  3. Research Funds of Renmin University of China
  4. [2017ZX07102-003]
  5. [2020030257]

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This study investigated the growth kinetics, denitrification performances, and characteristics of metabolic pathways of Thauera linaloolentis under different carbon source conditions. The findings showed that carbon sources with simple metabolic pathways promoted the reproduction of Thauera linaloolentis and accelerated the denitrification process.
Characterizing the molecular mechanism through which different carbon sources affect the denitrification pro-cess would provide a basis for the proper selection of carbon sources, thus avoiding excessive carbon source dosing and secondary pollution while also improving denitrification efficiency. Here, we selected Thauera lina-loolentis as a model organism of denitrification, whose genomic information was elucidated by draft genome sequencing and KEGG annotations, to investigate the growth kinetics, denitrification performances and char-acteristics of metabolic pathways under diverse carbon source conditions. We reconstructed a metabolic network of Thauera linaloolentis based on genomic analysis to help develop a systematic method of researching electron pathways. Our findings indicated that carbon sources with simple metabolic pathways (e.g., ethanol and sodium acetate) promoted the reproduction of Thauera linaloolentis, and its maximum growth density reached OD600 = 0.36 and maximum specific growth rate reached 0.145 h-1. These carbon sources also accelerated the denitrification process without the accumulation of intermediates. Nitrate could be reduced completely under any carbon source condition; but in the glucose group, the maximum accumulation of nitrite was 117.00 mg/L (1.51 times more than that in the ethanol group, which was 77.41 mg/L), the maximum accumulation of nitric oxide was 363.02 mu g/L (7.35 times more than that in the ethanol group, which was 49.40 mu g/L), and the maximum accumulation of nitrous oxide was 22.58 mg/L (26.56 times more than that in the ethanol group, which was 0.85 mg/L). Molecular biological analyses demonstrated that diverse types of carbon sources directly induced different carbon metabolic activities, resulting in variations in electron generation efficiency. Further-more, the activities of the electron transport system were positively correlated with different carbon metabolic activities. Finally, these differences were reflected in the phenomenon of electronic competition between deni-trifying reductases. Thus we concluded that this was the main molecular mechanism through which the carbon source type affected the denitrification process. In brief, carbon sources with simple metabolic pathways induced higher efficiency of electron generation, transfer, and competition, which promoted rapid proliferation and complete denitrification; otherwise Thauera linaloolentis would grow slowly and intermediate products would accumulate seriously. Our study established a method to evaluate and optimize carbon source utilization effi-ciency based on confirmed molecular mechanisms.

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