| Literature DB >> 31376758 |
Shasha Zou1, Ning Yan1, Chenyuan Zhang1, Yuwei Zhou1, Xueqi Wu1, Jue Wang1, Yang Liu1, Yongming Zhang2, Bruce E Rittmann3.
Abstract
It is common that biological wastewater-treatment processes are exposed to inputs of toxic compounds, such as phenolics. Due to their slow growth rate, nitrifying bacteria are most susceptible to inhibition that can lead to loss of nitrification capacity. Here, a microbial community containing nitrifying bacteria was acclimated to phenol, and it developed resistance to phenol inhibition and maintained nitrification activity. For the phenol-acclimated biomass, the NH4+-N removal rates were almost unaffected when it was suddenly exposed to phenol. Heterotrophic synthesis and nitrification rates contributed 76% and 24% of the total NH4+-N removal respectively during phenol removal, but the nitrification rate increased significantly once phenol was removed and mineralized. In contrast, the NH4+-N removal rates decreased sharply for normal (unacclimated) nitrifying biomass when it was exposed to phenol. The phenol-acclimated biomass retained its resistance to phenol inhibition for at least two months after acclimation, and addition of the phenol-acclimated biomass to the normal biomass conferred resistance to phenol inhibition. Community analysis of the phenol-acclimated biomass showed an increase in families known to contain strains able to biodegrade phenolics. Taken together, the results indicate that the main impact of phenol acclimation was enrichment of phenol-biodegrading bacteria, which allowed rapid removal and mineralization of phenol and, consequently, alleviation of phenol's inhibition of nitrification.Entities:
Keywords: Biomass acclimation; Microbial communities; Nitrifying bacteria; Phenol
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31376758 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.133622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963