| Literature DB >> 19226456 |
Eitan Ben-Dov1, Ariel Kushmaro, Asher Brenner.
Abstract
Abundance and seasonal dynamics of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), in general, and of extreme halophilic SRB (belonging to Desulfocella halophila) in particular, were examined in highly saline industrial wastewater evaporation ponds over a forty one month period. Industrial wastewater was sampled and the presence of SRB was determined by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) with a set of primers designed to amplify the dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrA) gene. SRB displayed higher abundance during the summer (10(6)-10(8) targets ml(-1)) and lower abundance from the autumn-spring (10(3)-10(5) targets ml(-1)). However, addition of concentrated dissolved organic matter into the evaporation ponds during winter immediately resulted in a proliferation of SRB, despite the lower wastewater temperature (12-14 degrees C). These results indicate that the qPCR approach can be used for rapid measurement of SRB to provide valuable information about the abundance of SRB in harsh environments, such as highly saline industrial wastewaters. Low level of H2S has been maintained over five years, which indicates a possible inhibition of SRB activity, following artificial salination (approximately 16% w/v of NaCl) of wastewater evaporation ponds, despite SRB reproduction being detected by qPCR.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19226456 PMCID: PMC2652471 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1448-5-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Saline Systems ISSN: 1746-1448
Figure 1Seasonal evolution of SRBs in highly saline industrial wastewater evaporation ponds. Samples at 6 meter depth were collected monthly from five industrial wastewater evaporation ponds, over a forty one month period. The abundance of SRB was quantified by qPCR, with the temperature at same depths also being recorded. Bar heights represent means based on average samples of all five industrial wastewater ponds, while error bars represent standard deviation.
Oligonucleotides used for real-time PCR to amplify halophilic dsrA genes closely related to Desulfocella halophila.
| Primer paira | Sequence (5'-3')b | Primer binding sitec | Product size (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| RH-halo-1F | GTTCTTcTtGGTACAAGAACAGA | 192–214 | 144 |
| RH-halo-1R | GCATGAGTATTCACATCTT | 317–335 | |
| RH-halo-1F | GTTCTTcTtGGTACAAGAACAGA | 192–214 | 187 |
| RH-halo-2R | GGAATTCCTGTGTCAAgAAaTGA | 356–378 |
a. (F) and (R) correspond to forvard and reverse primers, respectively.
b. Bases that do not match appropriate sequences are shown as lowercase letters.
c. Positions within the Desulfocella halophila DSM 11763 (AF418200; Friedrich, 2002) dsrA open reading frame.
Figure 2Standard curves for SRB . Threshold cycle values (Ct) are plotted against 1.9 × 103 to 1.9 × 108 dsrA copies per assay, contained in a 10-fold dilution of the plasmid harboring the dsrA sequence. Data points represent the average of duplicate measurements, while error bars indicate standard deviation.
Figure 3Phylogenetic comparison of . Geometric forms indicate the sequences according to the sampling date: black triangle, 2005 and black circle, 2007. Tree was constructed by the Neighbor-Joining method [19] with the Mega package [21] using partial dsrA sequences. The numbers in parentheses indicate the total number of similar clones on the basis of ≥ 97% identity for each representative sequence. The bar represents ten substitutions per 100 nucleotide positions. Bootstrap probabilities [20] are indicated at branch nodes.