| Literature DB >> 27886541 |
Sen Wang1, Zhiwei Li2, Mengchun Gao3, Zonglian She4, Liang Guo4, Dong Zheng4, Yangguo Zhao4, Bingrui Ma2, Feng Gao4, Xuejiao Wang4.
Abstract
The nitrogen and phosphorus removal, microbial enzymatic activity, and microbial community of a sequencing batch reactor (SBR) were evaluated under long-term exposure to nickel oxide nanoparticles (NiO NPs). High NiO NP concentration (over 5 mg L-1) affected the removal of chemical oxygen demand, nitrogen, and phosphorus. The presence of NiO NP inhibited the microbial enzymatic activities and reduced the nitrogen and phosphorus removal rates of activated sludge. The microbial enzymatic activities of the activated sludge showed a similar variation trend to the nitrogen and phosphorus removal rates with the increase in NiO NP concentration from 0 to 60 mg L-1. The Ni content in the effluent and activated sludge showed an increasing trend with the increase in NiO NP concentration. Some NiO NPs were absorbed on the sludge surface or penetrate the cell membrane into the interior of microbial cells in the activated sludge. NiO NP facilitated the increase in reactive oxygen species by disturbing the balance between the oxidation and anti-oxidation processes, and the variation in lactate dehydrogenase demonstrated that NiO NP could destroy the cytomembrane and cause variations in the microbial morphology and physiological function. High-throughput sequencing demonstrated that the microbial community of SBR had some obvious changes at 0-60 mg L-1 NiO NPs at the phyla, class and genus levels.Entities:
Keywords: Activated sludge; LDH; Microbial diversity and richness; Microbial enzymatic activity; NiO NPs; ROS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27886541 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2016.10.139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086