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      Response and Adaptation of Microbial Community in a CANON Reactor Exposed to an Extreme Alkaline Shock

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          Abstract

          Responses of a microbial community in the completely autotrophic nitrogen removal over nitrite (CANON) process, which was shocked by a pH of 11.0 for 12 h, were investigated. During the recovery phase, the performance, anaerobic ammonia oxidation (anammox) activity, microbial community, and correlation of bacteria as well as the influencing factors were evaluated synchronously. The performance of the CANON process deteriorated rapidly with a nitrogen removal rate (NRR) of 0.13 kg·m −3·d −1, and Firmicutes, spore-forming bacteria, were the dominant phyla after alkaline shock. However, it could self-restore within 107 days after undergoing four stages, at which Planctomycetes became dominant with a relative abundance of 64.62%. Network analysis showed that anammox bacteria ( Candidatus Jettenia, Kuenenia, and Brocadia) were positively related to some functional bacteria such as Nitrosomonas, SM1A02, and Calorithrix. Canonical correspondence analysis presented a strong correlation between the microbial community and influencing factors during the recovery phase. With the increase of nitrogen loading rate, the decrease of free nitrous acid and the synergistic effects, heme c content, specific anammox activity (SAA), NRR, and the abundance of dominant genus increased correspondingly. The increase of heme c content regulates the quorum sensing system, promotes the secretion of extracellular polymeric substances, and further improves SAA, NRR, and the relative abundance of the dominant genus. This study highlights some implications for the recovery of the CANON reactor after being exposed to an alkaline shock.

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          Most cited references56

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          Full-scale partial nitritation/anammox experiences--an application survey.

          Partial nitritation/anammox (PN/A) has been one of the most innovative developments in biological wastewater treatment in recent years. With its discovery in the 1990s a completely new way of ammonium removal from wastewater became available. Over the past decade many technologies have been developed and studied for their applicability to the PN/A concept and several have made it into full-scale. With the perspective of reaching 100 full-scale installations in operation worldwide by 2014 this work presents a summary of PN/A technologies that have been successfully developed, implemented and optimized for high-strength ammonium wastewaters with low C:N ratios and elevated temperatures. The data revealed that more than 50% of all PN/A installations are sequencing batch reactors, 88% of all plants being operated as single-stage systems, and 75% for sidestream treatment of municipal wastewater. Additionally an in-depth survey of 14 full-scale installations was conducted to evaluate practical experiences and report on operational control and troubleshooting. Incoming solids, aeration control and nitrate built up were revealed as the main operational difficulties. The information provided gives a unique/new perspective throughout all the major technologies and discusses the remaining obstacles. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            Simultaneous determination of hemes a, b, and c from pyridine hemochrome spectra.

            Two procedures for analyzing overlapping optical spectra of mixtures of pyridine hemochromes are described, and extinction coefficients of pyridine hemochromes are provided for use with these methods. In the first procedure, absorbance is measured at a number of wavelengths equal to the number of components to be analyzed. This is the minimum amount of spectral data from which the concentration of each species can be calculated. In the second procedure, absorbance is measured at a number of wavelengths greater than the number of components to be analyzed. This redundancy of information makes it impossible to fit spectra which contain contributions from additional components, unless the spectra of the additional components are equal to linear combinations of the spectra of the species being analyzed. These two procedures are generally applicable to analyses of absolute or difference spectra of mixtures of components obeying Beer's law. The sensitivity to error in the absorbance measurements is only slightly greater than that for measuring a pure component at a single wavelength.
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              Biochemistry and molecular biology of anammox bacteria.

              Anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacteria are one of the latest additions to the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle. These bacteria derive their energy for growth from the conversion of ammonium and nitrite into dinitrogen gas in the complete absence of oxygen. These slowly growing microorganisms belong to the order Brocadiales and are affiliated to the Planctomycetes. Anammox bacteria are characterized by a compartmentalized cell architecture featuring a central cell compartment, the "anammoxosome". Thus far unique "ladderane" lipid molecules have been identified as part of their membrane systems surrounding the different cellular compartments. Nitrogen formation seems to involve the intermediary formation of hydrazine, a very reactive and toxic compound. The genome of the anammox bacterium Kuenenia stuttgartiensis was assembled from a complex microbial community grown in a sequencing batch reactor (74% enriched in this bacterium) using a metagenomics approach. The assembled genome allowed the in silico reconstruction of the anammox metabolism and identification of genes most likely involved in the process. The present anammox pathway is the only one consistent with the available experimental data, thermodynamically and biochemically feasible, and consistent with Ockham's razor: it invokes minimum biochemical novelty and requires the fewest number of biochemical reactions. The worldwide presence of anammox bacteria has now been established in many oxygen-limited marine and freshwater systems, including oceans, seas, estuaries, marshes, rivers and large lakes. In the marine environment over 50% of the N(2) gas released may be produced by anammox bacteria. Application of the anammox process offers an attractive alternative to current wastewater treatment systems for the removal of ammonia-nitrogen. Currently, at least five full scale reactor systems are operational.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Archaea
                Archaea
                ARCHAEA
                Archaea
                Hindawi
                1472-3646
                1472-3654
                2020
                23 June 2020
                : 2020
                : 8888615
                Affiliations
                1CAS Key Laboratory of Urban Pollutant Conversion, Institute of Urban Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xiamen 361021, China
                2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
                3Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou 350002, China
                Author notes

                Academic Editor: Rong Chen

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6397-6981
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8064-0504
                Article
                10.1155/2020/8888615
                7351368
                5a42903f-cd5a-451c-95ab-a5b59403a6b6
                Copyright © 2020 Ruili Yang et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 22 April 2020
                : 27 May 2020
                : 4 June 2020
                Funding
                Funded by: Science and Technology Program of Fujian Province
                Award ID: 2019Y01010111
                Funded by: National Natural Science Foundation of China
                Award ID: 51708536
                Categories
                Research Article

                Animal science & Zoology
                Animal science & Zoology

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