| Literature DB >> 26347085 |
Valeria Romanazzi1, Deborah Traversi2, Eugenio Lorenzi3, Giorgio Gilli4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The anaerobic digestion is one of the most spread renewable energy technology. The input biomasses included various environmental problematic wastes such as sludge coming from wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) and organic fraction of municipal solid waste (OFMSW). As biomolecular procedures have become important tools for the microbial characterisation of anaerobic samples coming from the reactors, it is crucial sampling and extracting properly DNA in order to employ such types of techniques. The current study is aimed to evaluate how freezing temperature and length of storage at -20 °C influence both the extracted DNA yield and microbial community quantifications from digested sludge samples collected at full-scale plants.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26347085 PMCID: PMC4562115 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-015-1407-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Comparison of DNA concentrations in anaerobic sludges from WWTP and OFMSW samples in the two experimental line
| DNA µg/g of weighted sample ± SD | ||
|---|---|---|
| WWTP | ||
| Fresh samples | Frozen samples | |
| A samples | 246.1 ± 107.7 | 89.6 ± 48.2 |
| B samples | 182.0 ± 65.2 | 75.5 ± 35.4 |
| C samples | 103.2 ± 44.6 | 28.3 ± 12.4 |
| D samples | 143.9 ± 64.9 | 43.5 ± 21.1 |
| All samples | 168.8 ± 89.0 | 59.2 ± 39.7 |
The mean values and SD are reported, based on 10 replicates for each type of samples, concerning WWTP samples. For OFMSW experimental line, only two samples were available, so SD was not calculated, since E and F samples were independent sludge samples
Fig. 1Total bacteria (triangles) and methanogens (dots) in the four fresh and frozen sample types. Black and grey colours indicate DNA extraction from fresh sample (first extraction) and from 10 days-frozen storage samples, respectively. (A samples input secondary WWTP sludge; B samples output secondary WWTP sludge; C samples input mixed WWTP sludge; D samples output mixed WWTP sludge)
Fig. 2Correlation between the two DNA extraction time point batches. Each data point refers to the mean value of the DNA concentration of the four types of samples collected during one sampling day. In the small graph the slope value corresponds to the preserved amount of DNA from both of the extraction time points. In the extended graph black line and dots represent the DNA yields in fresh samples, grey line and dots represent the DNA yields in 10-days frozen samples, finally the dashed line represents the DNA concentration tendency with the applied correction factor
Fig. 3Total bacteria (triangles) and methanogens (dots) enumeration in the two OFMSW samples, named E sample (grey line) anf F sample (black line). M The quantification of both the microbial targets was performed at regular intervals (meanly every 20 days) in order to monitor the effect of the storage at −20 °C along the time
Schematic experimental design of the two conducted experiments in which two clearly distinct activities are described
| Aim | Samples characteristics | Sample origin | Schedule of DNA extraction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comparing the extracted DNA concentration in fresh and frozen samples | 4 types of samples named A, B, C and D | Sludge from anaerobic digestion of WWTP | For each sample: DNA extraction from fresh sample and DNA extraction from 10-days frozen sample |
| Verifying the preservation of the extracted DNA concentration in frozen samples | 2 samples, named E and F | Sludge from anaerobic digestion of OFMSW | Repeated DNA extractions from aliquots of the same sample after different storage periods |