Project description:In response to the issues of low denitrification efficiency and high N₂O emissions in the biological nitrogen removal process of low C/N municipal wastewater, studies typically address these challenges by adding carbon sources. In this study, the addition of microorganisms enhanced the carbon flow and electron transport for nitrate reduction, significantly improving the denitrification performance of low C/N wastewater and reducing N₂O production. Proteomic analysis was employed to explore the mechanisms underlying this effect. The results revealed that the metabolites produced by the added microorganisms, S. oneidensis MR-1 and B. subtilis, including biosurfactants, heme, and cytochromes, altered the intracellular carbon redistribution in P. denitrificans, leading to an increased carbon flow directed towards nitrate reduction, thus enhancing total nitrogen removal efficiency.
Project description:Nitrogen and arsenic contaminants often coexist in groundwater, and microbes show the potential for simultaneous removal of nitrogen and arsenic. Here, we reported that Hydrogenophaga sp. H7 was heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification (HNAD) and arsenite [As(III)] oxidation bacterium. Strain H7 presented efficient capacities for simultaneous NH4+-N, NO3--N, or NO2--N removal with As(III) oxidation during aerobic cultivation. Strikingly, the bacterial ability to remove nitrogen and oxidize As(III) has remained high across a wide range of temperatures, pH values, and shaking speeds, exceeding that of the most commonly reported HNAD bacteria. Additionally, the previous HNAD strains exhibited a high denitrification efficiency, but a suboptimal concentration of nitrogen remained in the wastewater. Here, strain H7 combined with FeCl3 efficiently removed 96.14% of NH4+-N, 99.08% of NO3--N, and 94.68% of total nitrogen (TN), and it oxidized 100% of As(III), even at a low nitrogen concentration (35 mg/L). The residues in the wastewater still met the Surface Water Environmental Quality Standard of China after five continuous wastewater treatment cycles. Furthermore, genome and proteomic analyses led us to propose that the shortcut nitrification-denitrification pathway and As(III) oxidase AioBA are the key pathways that participate in simultaneous nitrogen removal and As(III) oxidation.
Project description:Enhanced Nitrogen Removal through Denitrification and Anammox from Domestic Wastewater in the Full-scale Anaerobic-Anoxic-Oxic Systyem
| PRJEB24431 | ENA
Project description:Sulphur autotrophic denitrification enhanced nitrogen removal efficiency of partial nitrification/anammox and inhibited the spread of antibiotic resistance genes
| PRJNA853505 | ENA
Project description:Nitrogen removal
| PRJNA530656 | ENA
Project description:Insights into sulfur cycling contribution to nitrogen removal in sulfur autotrophic denitrification combined microbial electrochemical denitrification
Project description:The Baltic Sea is one of the largest brackish water bodies in the world. Redoxclines that form between oxic and anoxic layers in the deepest sub-basins are a semi-permanent character of the pelagic Baltic Sea. The microbially mediated nitrogen removal processes in these redoxclines have been recognized as important ecosystem service that removes large proportion of the nitrogen load originating from the drainage basin. However, nitrification, which links mineralization of organic nitrogen and nitrogen removal processes, has remained poorly understood. To gain better understanding of the nitrogen cycling in the Baltic Sea, we analyzed the assemblage of ammonia oxidizing bacteria and archaea in the central Baltic Sea using functional gene microarrays and measured the biogeochemical properties along with potential nitrification rates. Overall, the ammonia oxidizer communities in the Baltic Sea redoxcline were very evenly distributed. However, the communities were clearly different between the eastern and western Gotland Basin and the correlations between different components of the ammonia oxidizer assemblages and environmental variables suggest ecological basis for the community composition. The more even community ammonia oxidizer composition in the eastern Gotland Basin may be related to the constantly oscillating redoxcline that does not allow domination of single archetype. The oscillating redoxcline also creates long depth range of optimal nitrification conditions. The rate measurements suggest that nitrification in the central Baltic Sea is able to produce all nitrate required by denitrification occurring below the nitrification zone.
2013-08-24 | GSE50164 | GEO
Project description:Biochar enhanced DAMO archaea
| PRJNA1116823 | ENA
Project description:Enhanced nitrogen removal from the polluted water with bacteria and carriers
| PRJNA720383 | ENA
Project description:Nitrogen removal pathways during simultaneous nitrification, denitrification, and phosphorus removal under low temperature and dissolved oxygen conditions