Proteomics

Dataset Information

0

N2O-reducing population in anaerobic digestate for next-generation biorest


ABSTRACT: Anaerobic digestion (AD) is a core technology in management of urban organic wastes, converting a fraction of the organic carbon to methane and the residual digestate, the biorest, have a great potential to become a major organic fertilizer for agricultural soils in the future. At the same time, mitigation of N2O-emissions from the agricultural soils is needed to reduce the climate forcing by food production. Our goal was therefore to enrich for N2O reducing bacteria in AD digestates prior to fertilization, and in this way provide an avenue for large-scale and low-cost cultivation of strongly N2O reducing bacteria which can be directly introduced to agricultural soils in large enough volumes to alter the fate of nitrogen in the soils. Gas kinetics and meta-omics (metagenomics and metaproteomics) analyses of the N2O enriched digestates identified populations of N2O respiring organisms that grew by harvesting fermentation intermediates of the methanogenic consortium.

INSTRUMENT(S): Q Exactive

ORGANISM(S): Prokaryotic Environmental Samples

SUBMITTER: Live Hagen  

LAB HEAD: Phillip B. Pope

PROVIDER: PXD022030 | Pride | 2022-02-16

REPOSITORIES: Pride

Dataset's files

Source:
Action DRS
M1_1_F1.raw Raw
M1_1_F2.raw Raw
M1_1_F3.raw Raw
M1_1_F4.raw Raw
M1_1_sec_F1.raw Raw
Items per page:
1 - 5 of 65
altmetric image

Publications

Nitrous oxide respiring bacteria in biogas digestates for reduced agricultural emissions.

Jonassen Kjell Rune KR   Hagen Live H LH   Vick Silas H W SHW   Arntzen Magnus Ø MØ   Eijsink Vincent G H VGH   Frostegård Åsa Å   Lycus Pawel P   Molstad Lars L   Pope Phillip B PB   Bakken Lars R LR  

The ISME journal 20210906 2


Inoculating agricultural soils with nitrous oxide respiring bacteria (NRB) can reduce N<sub>2</sub>O-emission, but would be impractical as a standalone operation. Here we demonstrate that digestates obtained after biogas production are suitable substrates and vectors for NRB. We show that indigenous NRB in digestates grew to high abundance during anaerobic enrichment under N<sub>2</sub>O. Gas-kinetics and meta-omic analyses showed that these NRB's, recovered as metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

2010-08-05 | GSE23422 | GEO
2010-08-05 | E-GEOD-23422 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2021-07-09 | GSE179685 | GEO
2020-01-07 | GSE142805 | GEO
2020-01-07 | GSE142804 | GEO
2022-02-16 | PXD023233 | Pride
2020-09-28 | PXD015757 | Pride
| PRJNA599559 | ENA
2018-10-19 | GSE121473 | GEO
2020-08-01 | GSE125810 | GEO