| Literature DB >> 29097756 |
Jiaguang Zhang1,2, Aijuan Zhou3, Yuanzhen Liu1, Bowei Zhao4, Yunbo Luan5, Sufang Wang4, Xiuping Yue4, Zhu Li6.
Abstract
Current studies have employed various pure-cultures for improving concrete durability based on microbially induced carbonate precipitation (MICP). However, there have been very few reports concerned with microbial consortia, which could perform more complex tasks and be more robust in their resistance to environmental fluctuations. In this study, we constructed three microbial consortia that are capable of MICP under aerobic (AE), anaerobic (AN) and facultative anaerobic (FA) conditions. The results showed that AE consortia showed more positive effects on inorganic carbon conversion than AN and FA consortia. Pyrosequencing analysis showed that clear distinctions appeared in the community structure between different microbial consortia systems. Further investigation on microbial community networks revealed that the species in the three microbial consortia built thorough energetic and metabolic interaction networks regarding MICP, nitrate-reduction, bacterial endospores and fermentation communities. Crack-healing experiments showed that the selected cracks of the three consortia-based concrete specimens were almost completely healed in 28 days, which was consistent with the studies using pure cultures. Although the economic advantage might not be clear yet, this study highlights the potential implementation of microbial consortia on crack healing in concrete.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29097756 PMCID: PMC5668378 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-15177-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The variation of pH and IC-CR values in the presence of different microbial consortia (Note: error bars represent the standard deviation).
Alpha diversity of the three samples.
| Name | Seq num*1 | OTU num*2 | Barcode | Shannon index | Chao1 index | ACE index | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AE | 24945 | 1157 | GTATCT | 3.59 | 13371 | 38793 | 0.96 |
| AN | 23716 | 1205 | AGGCGG | 2.31 | 12060 | 32569 | 0.96 |
| FA | 25471 | 1289 | TCTATT | 2.34 | 19193 | 68621 | 0.95 |
*1“Seq num” indicated the sequence numbers obtained from the high-throughput sequencing analysis;
*2“OTU num” indicated the classified OTU numbers obtained from the gene sequences with the identity of over 97%.
Figure 2Rarefaction curves (A) and distance heatmap analyses (B) of bacterial communities from the three selected microbial consortia based on pyrosequencing of the 16S rRNA gene.
Figure 3Taxonomic classification of pyrosequences from bacterial communities of three samples at the genus levels representing all OTUs present at a relative abundance > 1% (A). Relative abundance of the specific functional genera classification for MICP, DNB, BE and fermentation (B). Hierarchical clustering analysis of the bacterial communities of three samples (C).
Figure 4Network of communities based on OTUs in three selected microbial consortia (A). Overlap of the four bacterial communities based on OTU (3% distance) (B).
Figure 5Observed interactions between key populations during MICP introduced by the AN and FA microbial consortia.
Figure 6Microscopic images of four types of crack-healing processes.
Figure 7Crack healing percentage as a function of the initial crack width for concrete specimens at healing times of 7 days (A) and 28 days (B). Average values of healed crack widths at different healing times (C).