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1.
Phenol present in wastewaters from various industries has an inhibitory effect on nitrification even at low concentrations. Hence, the biological treatment of wastewater containing both phenol and ammonia involves a series of treatment steps. It is difficult to achieve nitrification capability in an activated sludge system that contains phenol at concentrations above the inhibitory level. Batch treatment of wastewater containing various concentrations of phenol showed that the ammonia oxidation capability of suspended Nitrosomonas europaea cells, an ammonia oxidizer, was completely inhibited in the presence of more than 5.0 mg/L phenol. To protect the ammonia oxidizer from the inhibitory effect of phenol and to achieve ammonia oxidation capability in the wastewater containing phenol at concentrations above the inhibitory level, a simple bacterial consortium composed of an ammonia oxidizer (N. europaea) and a phenol‐degrading bacterial strain (Acinetobacter sp.) was used. Ammonia oxidation did not occur in the presence of phenol at concentrations above the inhibitory level when suspended or immobilized N. europaea and Acinetobacter sp. cells were used in batch treatment. Following the acclimatization of the immobilized cells, accumulation of nitrite was observed, even when the wastewater contained phenol at concentrations above the inhibitory level. These results showed that immobilization was effective in protecting N. europaea cells from the inhibitory effect of phenol present in the wastewater.  相似文献   

2.
Nitrosomonas europaea is a chemolithoautotrophic nitrifier, a gram-negative bacterium that can obtain all energy required for growth from the oxidation of ammonia to nitrite, and this may be beneficial for various biotechnological and environmental applications. However, compared to other bacteria, growth of ammonia oxidizing bacteria is very slow. A prerequisite to produce high cell density N. europaea cultures is to minimize the concentrations of inhibitory metabolic by-products. During growth on ammonia nitrite accumulates, as a consequence, N. europaea cannot grow to high cell concentrations under conventional batch conditions. Here, we show that single-vessel dialysis membrane bioreactors can be used to obtain substantially increased N. europaea biomasses and substantially reduced nitrite levels in media initially containing high amounts of the substrate. Dialysis membrane bioreactor fermentations were run in batch as well as in continuous mode. Growth was monitored with cell concentration determinations, by assessing dry cell mass and by monitoring ammonium consumption as well as nitrite formation. In addition, metabolic activity was probed with in vivo acridine orange staining. Under continuous substrate feed, the maximal cell concentration (2.79?×?1012/L) and maximal dry cell mass (0.895 g/L) achieved more than doubled the highest values reported for N. europaea cultivations to date.  相似文献   

3.
Metabolism of ammonia (NH3) and hydroxylamine (NH2OH) by wild-type and a nitrite reductase (nirK) deficient mutant of Nitrosomonas europaea was investigated to clarify the role of NirK in the NH3 oxidation pathway. NirK-deficient N. europaea grew more slowly, consumed less NH3, had a lower rate of nitrite (NO2 ) production, and a significantly higher rate of nitrous oxide (N2O) production than the wild-type when incubated with NH3 under high O2 tension. In incubations with NH3 under low O2 tension, NirK-deficient N. europaea grew more slowly, but had only modest differences in NH3 oxidation and product formation rates relative to the wild-type. In contrast, the nirK mutant oxidized NH2OH to NO2 at consistently slower rates than the wild-type, especially under low O2 tension, and lost a significant pool of NH2OH–N to products other than NO2 and N2O. The rate of N2O production by the nirK mutant was ca. three times higher than the wild-type during hydrazine-dependent NO2 reduction under both high and low O2 tension. Together, the results indicate that NirK activity supports growth of N. europaea by supporting the oxidation of NH3 to NO2 via NH2OH, and stimulation of hydrazine-dependent NO2 reduction by NirK-deficient N. europaea indicated the presence of an alternative, enzymatic pathway for N2O production.  相似文献   

4.
Optimal operational factors for nitrite accumulation in batch reactors   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Bae W  Baek S  Chung J  Lee Y 《Biodegradation》2001,12(5):359-366
The environmental factors that affected the accumulation of nitrite in nitrifying reactors were investigated using a mixed culture. A batch reactor with 50 mg-N/l of ammonia was used. The pH, temperature and dissolved oxygen concentration were varied. The concentration of unionized free ammonia also changed with the oxidation of ammonia and the variation of pH and temperature. The accumulation of nitrite was affected sensitively by pH and temperature. A higher nitrite concentration was observed at pH 8-9 or temperature around 30 °C. The dissolved oxygen also affected, giving the highest nitrite accumulation at around 1.5 mg/l. These were the favoredconditions for nitrite production. The free ammonia concentration influenced thenitrite accumulation also, by inhibiting nitrite oxidation. The inhibition becameapparent at a concentration of approximately 4 mg/l or above, but insignificant atbelow 1 mg/l. Thus, simultaneously high free ammonia concentration and maximumspecific ammonia-oxidation rate (above 15 × 10-3 mg-N/mg-VSSh)were needed for a significant nitrite accumulation. When the two conditions were met, thenthe highest accumulation was observed when the ratio of the maximum specific oxidationrate of ammonia to the maximum specific oxidation rate of nitrite (ka/kn) was highest.Under the optimal operating conditions of pH 8, 30 °C and 1.5 mg/l of dissolvedoxygen, as much as 77% of the removed ammonia accumulated in nitrite.  相似文献   

5.
Chemolithotrophic nitrifying bacteria are dependent on the presence of oxygen for the oxidation of ammonium via nitrite to nitrate. The success of nitrification in oxygen-limited environments such as waterlogged soils, will largely depend on the oxygen sequestering abilities of both ammonium- and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria. In this paper the oxygen consumption kinetics of Nitrosomonas europaea and Nitrobacter winogradskyi serotype agilis were determined with cells grown in mixed culture in chemostats at different growth rates and oxygen tensions.Reduction of oxygen tension in the culture repressed the oxidation of nitrite before the oxidation of ammonium was affected and hence nitrite accumulated. K m values found were within the range of 1–15 and 22–166 M O2 for the ammonium- and nitrite-oxidizing cells, respectively, always with the lowest values for the N. europaea cells. Reduction of the oxygen tension in the culture lowered the half saturation constant K m for oxygen of both species. On the other hand, the maximal oxygen consumption rates were reduced at lower oxygen levels especially at 0 kPa. The specific affinity for oxygen indicated by the V max/K m ratio, was higher for cells of N. europaea than for N. winogradskyi under all conditions studied. Possible consequences of the observed differences in specific affinities for oxygen of ammonium-and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria are discussed with respect to the behaviour of these organisms in oxygen-limited environments.  相似文献   

6.
Nitrosomonas europaea, an obligate ammonia-oxidizing bacterium, lost an increasing amount of ammonia oxidation activity upon exposure to increasing concentrations of nitrite, the primary product of ammonia-oxidizing metabolism. The loss of activity was specific to the ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) enzyme, as confirmed by a decreased rate of NH4+-dependent O2 consumption, some loss of active AMO molecules observed by polypeptide labeling with 14C2H2, the protection of activity by substrates of AMO, and the requirement for copper. The loss of AMO activity via nitrite occurred under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions, and more activity was lost under alkaline than under acidic conditions except in the presence of large concentrations (20 mM) of nitrite. These results indicate that nitrite toxicity in N. europaea is mediated by a unique mechanism that is specific for AMO.  相似文献   

7.
The ammonia oxidation rate by sewage sludge was determined as a function of the dissolved oxygen tension. Samples of sludge were taken from a domestic waste water treatment pilot plant in which sludge was completely retained by membrane filtration. The samples were subcultured chemolithotrophically in recycling reactors. The gas supplied was a mixture of pure argon and oxygen. The K O2 for ammonia oxidation was estimated to be 0.97 (±0.16) kPa dissolved oxygen. Together with ammonia oxidation and oxygen consumption, dinitrogen gas was produced. So, aerobic denitrification occurred. At dissolved oxygen tensions of 1.25 kPa and higher, the dinitrogen production rate (per N-mole) equalled 20% of the ammonia oxidation rate. This proportion was even 58% at 0.3 kPa dissolved oxygen. At 0.15 kPa dissolved oxygen, however, nitrification hardly proceeded, while dinitrogen production soon stopped. Most likely, a nitrifier concomitantly oxidized ammonia and reduced nitrite to dinitrogen.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrosomonas europaea and Nitrobacter winogradskyi (strain “Engel”) were grown in ammonia-limited and nitrite-limited conditions, respectively, in a retentostat with complete biomass retention at 25°C and pH 8. Fitting the retentostat biomass and oxygen consumption data of N. europaea and N. winogradskyi to the linear equation for substrate utilization resulted in up to eight-times-lower maintenance requirements compared to the maintenance energy demand (m) calculated from chemostat experiments. Independent of the growth rate at different stages of such a retention culture, the maximum specific oxygen consumption rate measured by mass spectrometric analysis of inlet and outlet gas oxygen content always amounted to approximately 45 μmol of O2 mg−1 of biomass-C · h−1 for both N. europaea and N. winogradskyi. When bacteria were starved for different time periods (up to 3 months), the spontaneous respiratory activity after an ammonia or nitrite pulse decreased with increasing duration of the previous starvation time period, but the observed decrease was many times faster for N. winogradskyi than for N. europaea. Likewise, the velocity of resuscitation decreased with extended time periods of starvation. The increase in oxygen consumption rates during resuscitation referred to the reviving population only, since in parallel no significant increase in the cell concentrations was detectable. N. europaea more readily recovers from starvation than N. winogradskyi, explaining the occasionally observed nitrite accumulation in the environment after ammonia becomes available. From chloramphenicol (100 μg · ml−1) inhibition experiments with N. winogradskyi, it has been concluded that energy-starved cells must have a lower protein turnover rate than nonstarved cells. As pointed out by Stein and Arp (L. Y. Stein and D. J. Arp, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64:1514–1521, 1998), nitrifying bacteria in soil have to cope with extremely low nutrient concentrations. Therefore, a chemostat is probably not a suitable tool for studying their physiological properties during a long-lasting nutrient shortage. In comparison with chemostats, retentostats offer a more realistic approach with respect to substrate provision and availability.  相似文献   

9.
The ammonia-oxidizing bacterial community (AOB) was investigated in two types of laboratory-scale bioreactors performing partial oxidation of ammonia to nitrite or nitrate at high (80 mM) to extremely high (428 mM) concentrations of ammonium bicarbonate. At all conditions, the dominant AOB was affiliated to the Nitrosomonas europaea lineage as was determined by fluorescence in situ hybridization and polymerase chain reaction in combination with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. Molecular analysis of the mixed populations, based on the 16S rRNA and cbbL genes, demonstrated the presence of two different phylotypes of Nitrosomonas, while microbiological analysis produced a single phylotype, represented by three different morphotypes. One of the most striking features of the AOB populations encountered in the bioreactors was the domination of highly aggregated obligate microaerophilic Nitrosomonas, with unusual cellular and colony morphology, commonly observed in nitrifying bioreactors but rarely investigated by cultural methods. The latter is probably not an adaptation to stressful conditions created by high ammonia or nitrite concentrations, but oxygen seems to be a stressful factor in these bioreactors.  相似文献   

10.
The soil nitrifying bacterium Nitrosomonas europaea has shown the ability to transform cometabolically naphthalene as well as other 2- and 3-ringed polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) to more oxidized products. All of the observed enzymatic reactions were inhibited by acetylene, a selective inhibitor of ammonia monooxygenase (AMO). A strong inhibitory effect of naphthalene on ammonia oxidation by N. europaea was observed. Naphthalene was readily oxidized by N. europaea and 2-naphthol was detected as a major product (85%) of naphthalene oxidation. The maximum naphthol production rate was 1.65 nmole/mg protein-min in the presence of 240 M naphthalene and 10 mM NH4 +. Our results demonstrate that the oxidation between ammonia and naphthalene showed a partial competitive inhibition. The relative ratio of naphthalene and ammonia oxidation, depending on naphthalene concentrations, demonstrated that the naphthalene was oxidized 2200-fold slower than ammonia at lower concentration of naphthalene (15 M) whereas naphthalene was oxidized only 100-fold slower than ammonia oxidation. NH4 +- and N2H4-dependent O2 uptake measurement demonstrated irreversible inhibitory effects of the naphthalene and subsequent oxidation products on AMO and HAO activity.  相似文献   

11.
The ammonia oxidizers Nitrosomonas europaea and Nitrosomonas eutropha are able to grow chemoorganotrophically under anoxic conditions with pyruvate, lactate, acetate, serine, succinate, α-ketoglutarate, or fructose as substrate and nitrite as terminal electron acceptor. The growth yield of both bacteria is about 3.5 mg protein (mmol pyruvate)−1 and the maximum growth rates of N. europaea and N. eutropha are 0.094 d−1 and 0.175 d−1, respectively. In the presence of pyruvate and CO2 about 80% of the incorporated carbon derives from pyruvate and about 20% from CO2. Pyruvate is used as energy and only carbon source in the absence of CO2 (chemoorganoheterotrophic growth). CO2 stimulates the chemoorganotrophic growth of both ammonia oxidizers and the expression of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase is down-regulated at increasing CO2 concentration. Ammonium, although required as nitrogen source, is inhibitory for the chemoorganotrophic metabolism of N. europaea and N. eutropha. In the presence of ammonium pyruvate consumption and the expression of the genes aceE, ppc, gltA, odhA, and ppsA (energy conservation) as well as nirK, norB, and nsc (denitrification) are reduced.  相似文献   

12.
In a complete nitrification sequencing batch reactor (CNSBR), where ammonium containing wastewater (200–1,000 mg N/L) is completely oxidized to nitrate up to 2.4 kg NH4 +–N/m3 d, both ammonia oxidizers and nitrite oxidizers were enriched in the sludge granules. Quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses of the sludge granules of the CNSBR showed that ammonia oxidizers and nitrite oxidizers occupied 31 and 4.2% of total bacteria, respectively. Most of the nitrite oxidizers were Nitrobacter species (95% of the nitrite oxidizers) and the remainder was Nitrospira species. The population of nitrite oxidizers was significantly higher than that of partial nitrification SBR (PNSBR) where most of the ammonium was oxidized to nitrite. The PNSBR had 37% (ammonia oxidizers) and 0.4% (nitrite oxidizers) of total bacteria. Comparative study with CNSBR and PNSBR revealed that free nitrous acid, rather than free ammonia, played a critical inhibition role to wash out nitrite oxidizers from the reactor. The concentrations of free ammonia and nitrite as well as free nitrous acid in the CNSBR selected Nitrobacter as the dominant nitrite oxidizers rather than Nitrospira.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Nitrite reductase (NirK) and nitric oxide reductase (NorB) have long been thought to play an essential role in nitrous oxide (N2O) production by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. However, essential gaps remain in our understanding of how and when NirK and NorB are active and functional, putting into question their precise roles in N2O production by ammonia oxidizers. The growth phenotypes of the Nitrosomonas europaea ATCC 19718 wild-type and mutant strains deficient in expression of NirK, NorB, and both gene products were compared under atmospheric and reduced O2 tensions. Anoxic resting-cell assays and instantaneous nitrite (NO2) reduction experiments were done to assess the ability of the wild-type and mutant N. europaea strains to produce N2O through the nitrifier denitrification pathway. Results confirmed the role of NirK for efficient substrate oxidation of N. europaea and showed that NorB is involved in N2O production during growth at both atmospheric and reduced O2 tensions. Anoxic resting-cell assays and measurements of instantaneous NO2 reduction using hydrazine as an electron donor revealed that an alternate nitrite reductase to NirK is present and active. These experiments also clearly demonstrated that NorB was the sole nitric oxide reductase for nitrifier denitrification. The results of this study expand the enzymology for nitrogen metabolism and N2O production by N. europaea and will be useful to interpret pathways in other ammonia oxidizers that lack NirK and/or NorB genes.  相似文献   

15.
《Process Biochemistry》2004,39(10):1223-1229
Partial nitrification to nitrite is technically feasible and economically favourable, especially when wastewaters contained high ammonium concentrations or low C/N ratios. Partial nitrification can be obtained by selectively inhibiting nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) through appropriate regulation of the pH, temperature and dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations. The effect of pH, DO levels and temperature on ammonia oxidation rate and nitrite accumulation was investigated in order to determine the optimal conditions for partial nitrification of synthetic wastewater with high ammonia concentration. The experiments performed at low DO levels to lower the total oxygen needed in the nitrification step, which means great saving in aeration. During the start-up stage pH and DO were set at 7.0–7.4 and 0.5 mg/l, respectively. The reactor was operated until complete partial nitrification was achieved. The effect of pH, DO on partial nitrification was studied, as pH was kept at 6.5, 7.5, 8.5, 9.5 and DO at 0.5±0.2, 1.5±0.2 and 2.5±0.2 mg/l, and temperature at 30 °C. The influence of temperature on ka value was studied by keeping pH=7.5, DO=1.5 mg/l and temperature was controlled at 12, 20 and 30 °C, respectively. The results showed that partial nitrification to nitrite was steadily obtained and the optimal operational parameters were pH=7.5, DO=1.5 mg/l, T=30 °C based on ammonia oxidation rate and nitrite accumulation rate. The maximum ka was achieved and to be 115.1×10−3 mg NH4+–N (mg VSS h)−1 under this condition.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Ammonia‐oxidizing bacteria (AOB) have long been considered key to the removal of nitrogen in activated sludge bioreactors. Culture‐independent molecular analyses have established that AOB lineages in bioreactors are dynamic, but the underlying operational or environmental factors are unclear. Furthermore, the contribution of ammonia‐oxidizing archaea (AOA) to nitrogen removal in bioreactors has not been studied. To this end, we investigated the abundance of AOA and AOB as well as correlations between dynamics in AOB lineages and operational parameters at a municipal wastewater treatment plant sampled weekly over a 1 year period. Quantitative PCR measurements of bacterial and archaeal ammonia monooxygenase subunit A (amoA) genes revealed that the bacterial homologue predominated by at least three orders of magnitude in all samples. Archaeal amoA was only detectable in ~15% of these samples. Using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, we monitored AOB lineages based on amoA genes. The Nitrosomonas europaea lineage and a novel Nitrosomonas‐like cluster were the dominant AOB signatures, with a Nitrosospira lineage present at lower relative abundance. These lineages exhibited strong temporal oscillations, with one becoming sequentially dominant over the other. Using non‐metric multidimensional scaling and redundancy analyses, we tested correlations between terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism profiles and 20 operational and environmental parameters. The redundancy analyses indicated that the dynamics of AOB lineages correlated most strongly with temperature, dissolved oxygen and influent nitrite and chromium. The Nitrosospira lineage signal had a strong negative correlation to dissolved oxygen and temperature, while the Nitrosomonas‐like (negative correlations) and N. europaea lineages (positive correlations) were inversely linked (relative to one another) to influent nitrite and chromium. Overall, this study suggests that AOA may be minor contributors to ammonia oxidation in highly aerated activated sludge, and provides insight into parameters controlling the diversity and dominance of AOB lineages within bioreactors during periods of stable nitrification.  相似文献   

18.
Ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) from Nitrosomonas europaea catalyzes the oxidation of ammonia to hydroxylamine and has been shown to oxidize a variety of halogenated and nonhalogenated hydrocarbons. As part of a program focused upon extending these observations to natural systems, a study was conducted to examine the influence of soil upon the cooxidative abilities of N. europaea. Small quantities of Willamette silt loam (organic carbon content, 1.8%; cation-exchange capacity, 15 cmol/kg of soil) were suspended with N. europaea cells in a soil-slurry-type reaction mixture. The oxidations of ammonia and three different hydrocarbons (ethylene, chloroethane, and 1,1,1-trichloroethane) were compared to results for controls in which no soil was added. The soil significantly inhibited nitrite production from 10 mM ammonium by N. europaea. Inhibition resulted from a combination of ammonium adsorption onto soil colloids and the exchangeable acidity of the soil lowering the pH of the reaction mixture. These phenomena resulted in a substantial drop in the concentration of NH4+ in solution (10 to 4.5 mM) and, depending upon the pH, in a reduction in the amount of available NH3 to concentrations (8 to 80 μM) similar to the Ks value of AMO for NH3 (~29 μM). At a fixed initial pH (7.8), the presence of soil also modified the rates of oxidation of ethylene and chloroethane and changed the concentrations at which their maximal rates of oxidation occurred. The modifying effects of soil on nitrite production and on the cooxidation of ethylene and chloroethane could be circumvented by raising the ammonium concentration in the reaction mixture from 10 to 50 mM. Soil had virtually no effect on the oxidation of 1,1,1-trichloroethane.  相似文献   

19.
This study has investigated the acclimation of ammonia-oxidizing communities (AOC) to low dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations. Under controlled laboratory conditions, two sequencing batch reactors seeded with activated sludge from the same source were operated at high DO (near saturation) and low DO (0.1 mg O2/L) concentrations for a period of 220 days. The results demonstrated stable and complete nitrification at low DO conditions after an acclimation period of approximately 140 days. Acclimation brought about increased specific oxygen uptake rates and enhanced expression of a particular heme protein in the soluble fraction of the cells in the low DO reactor as compared to the high DO reactor. The induced protein was determined not to be any of the enzymes or electron carriers present in the conventional account of ammonia oxidation in ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB). Further research is required to determine the specific nature of the heme protein detected; a preliminary assessment suggests either a type of hemoglobin protein or a lesser-known component of the energy-transducing pathways of AOB. The effect of DO on AOC dynamics was evaluated using the 16S rRNA gene as the basis for phylogenetic comparisons and organism quantification. Ammonium consumption by ammonia-oxidizing archaea and anaerobic ammonia-oxidizing bacteria was ruled out by fluorescent in situ hybridization in both reactors. Even though Nitrosomonas europaea was the dominant AOB lineage in both high and low DO sequencing batch reactors at the end of operation, this enrichment could not be linked in the low DO reactor to acclimation to oxygen-limited conditions.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Nitrification of ammonia in concentrated waste streams is gaining a lot of attention nowadays. Nitrosomonas europaea is the predominant ammonia-oxidizing species in these environments. Prediction of the behaviour of a pure culture of N. europaea (ATCC 19718) under conditions prevailing in concentrated waste streams was the aim of this study. The initial oxygen consumption rate of a concentrated cell suspension was used as a rapid assay to measure the effects on N. europaea under various conditions. Several relationships, based on Michaelis-Menten kinetics, were derived. They describe the behaviour of N. europaea at substrate (NH4 +), product (NO2 and K+, Na+, SO inf4 sup2– , NO3 , Cl) concentrations up to 500 mol/m3 and pHs ranging from 6.5 to 8.5. High concentrations of ions inhibited N. europaea but specific substrate inhibition was not observed. Product inhibition was strongly pH-dependent and severe inhibition was found at pH 6.5. Correspondence to: J. H. Hunik  相似文献   

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