Literature DB >> 16347517

Control of Interspecies Electron Flow during Anaerobic Digestion: Role of Floc Formation in Syntrophic Methanogenesis.

Jurgen H Thiele1, M Chartrain, J Gregory Zeikus.   

Abstract

The flora of an anaerobic whey-processing chemostat was separated by anaerobic sedimentation techniques into a free-living bacterial fraction and a bacterial floc fraction. The floc fraction constituted a major part (i.e., 57% total protein) of the total microbial population in the digestor, and it accounted for 87% of the total CO(2)-dependent methanogenic activity and 76% of the total ethanol-consuming acetogenic activity. Lactose was degraded by both cellular fractions, but in the free flora fraction it was associated with higher intermediary levels of H(2), ethanol, butyrate, and propionate production. Electron microscopic analysis of flocs showed bacterial diversity and juxtapositioning of tentative Desulfovibrio and Methanobacterium species without significant microcolony formation. Ethanol, an intermediary product of lactose-hydrolyzing bacteria, was converted to acetate and methane within the flocs by interspecies electron transfer. Ethanol-dependent methane formation was compartmentalized and closely coupled kinetically within the flocs but without significant formation of H(2) gas. Physical disruption of flocs into fragments of 10- to 20-mum diameter initially increased the H(2) partial pressure but did not change the carbon transformation kinetic patterns of ethanol metabolism or demonstrate a significant role for H(2) in CO(2) reduction to methane. The data demonstrate that floc formation in a whey-processing anaerobic digestor functions in juxtapositioning cells for interspecies electron transfer during syntrophic ethanol conversion into acetate and methane but by a mechanism which was independent of the available dissolved H(2) gas pool in the ecosystem.

Entities:  

Year:  1988        PMID: 16347517      PMCID: PMC202390          DOI: 10.1128/aem.54.1.10-19.1988

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  19 in total

1.  Methanogenesis from sucrose by defined immobilized consortia.

Authors:  W J Jones; J P Guyot; R S Wolfe
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4.  Determination of protein: a modification of the Lowry method that gives a linear photometric response.

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9.  Anaerobic degradation of benzoate to methane by a microbial consortium.

Authors:  J G Ferry; R S Wolfe
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10.  Influence of corrinoid antagonists on methanogen metabolism.

Authors:  W Kenealy; J G Zeikus
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1981-04       Impact factor: 3.490

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Review 3.  Bacterial signaling ecology and potential applications during aquatic biofilm construction.

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4.  Comparison of diffusion and reaction rates in anaerobic microbial aggregates.

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6.  Multicellular organization in a degradative biofilm community.

Authors:  G M Wolfaardt; J R Lawrence; R D Robarts; S J Caldwell; D E Caldwell
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7.  Diffusion of the Interspecies Electron Carriers H(2) and Formate in Methanogenic Ecosystems and Its Implications in the Measurement of K(m) for H(2) or Formate Uptake.

Authors:  D R Boone; R L Johnson; Y Liu
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  1989-07       Impact factor: 4.792

8.  Stress-Induced Production of Biofilm in the Hyperthermophile Archaeoglobus fulgidus.

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9.  Competition and coexistence of sulfate-reducing and methanogenic populations in anaerobic biofilms.

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10.  Interspecies Electron Transfer during Propionate and Butyrate Degradation in Mesophilic, Granular Sludge.

Authors:  J E Schmidt; B K Ahring
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  1995-07       Impact factor: 4.792

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