| Literature DB >> 24860282 |
Hao Jin1, Bailin Li1, Xu Peng2, Lanming Chen1.
Abstract
Activated sludge of wastewater treatment plants carries a diverse microflora. However, up to 80-90 % of microorganisms in activated sludge cannot be cultured by current laboratory techniques, leaving an enzyme reservoir largely unexplored. In this study, we investigated carboxypeptidase diversity in activated sludge of a wastewater treatment plant in Shanghai, China, by a culture-independent metagenomic approach. Three sets of consensus degenerate hybrid oligonucleotide primers (CODEHOPs) targeting conserved domains of public carboxypeptidases have been designed to amplify carboxypeptidase gene sequences in the metagenomic DNA of activated sludge by PCR. The desired amplicons were evaluated by carboxypeptidase sequence clone libraries and phylogenetic analyses. We uncovered a significant diversity of carboxypeptidases present in the activated sludge. Deduced carboxypeptidase amino acid sequences (127-208 amino acids) were classified into three distinct clusters, α, β, and γ. Sequences belonging to clusters α and β shared 58-97 % identity to known carboxypeptidase sequences from diverse species, whereas sequences in the cluster γ were remarkably less related to public carboxypeptidase homologous in the GenBank database, strongly suggesting that novel carboxypeptidase families or microbial niches exist in the activated sludge. We also observed numerous carboxypeptidase sequences that were much closer to those from representative strains present in industrial and sewage treatment and bioremediation. Thermostable and halotolerant carboxypeptidase sequences were also detected in clusters α and β. Coexistence of various carboxypeptidases is evidence of a diverse microflora in the activated sludge, a feature suggesting a valuable gene resource to be further explored for biotechnology application.Entities:
Keywords: Activated sludge; Carboxypeptidase; Culture-independent approach; Phylogenetic diversity
Year: 2013 PMID: 24860282 PMCID: PMC4028537 DOI: 10.1007/s13213-013-0704-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Microbiol ISSN: 1590-4261 Impact factor: 2.112
Fig. 1Alignments of carboxypeptidase amino acid sequences from homologues in the GenBank, and representative novel sequences obtained in this study by PCR amplification of metagenomic DNA from activated sludge samples with newly designed degenerate primers. The numbering of sequences is indicated above the alignments. The starting and ending residue numbers of each protein sequence used in this study are indicated for each sequence. Conserved amino acid residues are highlighted and shown below each alignment, and those for designing CODEHOPs are boxed with solid lines. Common active site sequence motifs are boxed with dotted lines, and conserved feature residues are located with hash marks above the aligned sequences. The carboxypeptidase sequences displayed in the alignments are as following: a Edwardsiella tarda FL6-60 (ADM41696.1; etfl6-60), Erwinia amylovora ATCC 49946 (YP_003538882.1; eaatcc), Pantoea vagans C9-1 (YP_003931068.1; pvc9-1), Yersinia pestis Pestoides F (ABP39239.1; yppf), Enterobacter cloacae SCF1 (ADO48513.1; ecscf1), Aliivibrio salmonicida LFI1238 (YP_002263204.1; aslfi1238), Vibrio splendidus LGP32 (YP_002416903.1; vslgp32), Vibrio harveyi ATCC BAA-1116 (YP_001445666.1; vhatcc), Acetobacter pasteurianus IFO 3283–01 (YP_003188184.1; apifo3283), Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 (NP_716995.1; somr-1). b Bacillus halodurans C-125 (NP_243015.1; bhc125, Bacillus pseudofirmus OF4 (YP_003428150.1; bpof4), Bacillus clausii KSM-K16 (BAD64530.1; bcksmk16), Geobacillus sp. SBS-4S (BAH28805.1; gsbs-4 s), Brevibacillus brevis NBRC 100599 (YP_002771690.1; bbsbrc), Solibacillus silvestris StLB046 (BAK18141.1; ssstlb), Bacillus tusciae DSM 2912 (YP_003589815.1; btdsm2912), Anoxybacillus flavithermus WK1 (ACJ33726.1; afwk1), Enterococcus faecium E1039 (ZP_06674096.1; efe1039), Halothermothrix orenii H 168 (ACL69173.1; hoh168). c Bacillus sp. m3-13 (ZP_07707682.1; bsm3), Bacillus sp. SG-1 (ZP_01858539.1; bssg-1), Listeria monocytogenes FSL J1-175 (ZP_05388672.1; lmfslj), Listeria monocytogenes 1816 (EGF39295.1; lm1816), Planococcus donghaensis MPA1U2 (ZP_08095878.1; pdmpa1u2), Oceanobacillus iheyensis HTE831 (NP_693505.1; oihte831), Listeria monocytogenes FSL N1-017 (ZP_07073423.1, lmfsln), Ornithinibacillus sp. TW25 (ZP_08783624.1, osptw25). The CG1 and CG22, CFC8 and CFC13, CFA1 and CFA6 were obtained from CG, CFC, and CFA libraries in this study, respectively
Fig. 2Agarose gel electrophoresis analysis of PCR products amplified by degenerate primers with metagenomic DNA isolated from activated sludge samples as templates. M1 1-kb plus DNA ladder, M2 100-bp DNA ladder. The CG, CFC, and CFA are amplicons yielded by the degenerate primers CG-F and CG-R, CFC-F and CFC-R, and CFA-F and CFA-R, respectively
Fig. 3Phylogenetic tree of deduced carboxypeptidase amino acid sequences obtained from microbial community of activated sludge samples in industrial and municipal wastewater. Based on the 102 novel sequences ranged in size from 127 to 208 amino acid residues, the neighbor-joining tree was constructed by the MEGA 4.0 together with a selected set of the public carboxypeptidase sequences. The length of the branches indicates the divergence among the amino acid sequences