| Literature DB >> 27403872 |
Weixing An1, Feng Guo2, Yulong Song1, Na Gao1, Shijie Bai3, Jingcheng Dai4, Hehong Wei1, Liping Zhang4, Dianzhen Yu1, Ming Xia1, Ying Yu5, Ming Qi5, Chunyuan Tian6, Haofeng Chen5, Zhenbin Wu4, Tong Zhang7, Dongru Qiu8.
Abstract
Activated sludge (AS) process has been widely utilized for municipal sewage and industrial wastewater treatment. Zoolgoea and its related floc-forming bacteria are required for formation of AS flocs which is the key to gravitational effluent-and-sludge separation and AS recycling. However, little is known about the genetics, biochemistry and physiology of Zoogloea and its related bacteria. This report deals with the comparative genomic analyses on two Zoogloea resiniphila draft genomes and the closely related proteobacterial species commonly found in AS. In particular, the metabolic processes involved in removal of organic matters, nitrogen and phosphorus were analyzed. Furthermore, it is revealed that a large gene cluster, encoding eight glycosyltransferases and other proteins involved in biosynthesis and export of extracellular polysaccharides (EPS), was required for floc formation. One of the two asparagine synthase paralogues, associated with this EPS biosynthesis gene cluster, was required for floc formation in Zoogloea. Similar EPS biosynthesis gene cluster(s) were identified in the genome of other AS proteobacteria including polyphosphate-accumulating Candidatus Accumulibacter phosphatis (CAP) and nitrifying Nitrosopira and Nitrosomonas bacteria, but the gene composition varies interspecifically and intraspecifically. Our results indicate that floc formation of desired AS bacteria, including CAP strains, facilitate their recruitment into AS and gradual enrichment via repeated AS settling and recycling processes.Entities:
Keywords: Activated sludge; Asparagine synthases; Floc formation; Genome; Zoogloea
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27403872 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2016.06.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236