Most cited article - PubMed ID 35167904
Physiology of anammox adaptation to low temperatures and promising biomarkers: A review
The adaptation of bacteria involved in anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) to low temperatures will enable more efficient removal of nitrogen from sewage across seasons. At lower temperatures, bacteria typically tune the synthesis of their membrane lipids to promote membrane fluidity. However, such adaptation of anammox bacteria lipids, including unique ladderane phospholipids and especially shorter ladderanes with absent phosphatidyl headgroup, is yet to be described in detail. We investigated the membrane lipids composition (UPLC-HRMS/MS) and dominant anammox populations (16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, Fluorescence in situ hybridization) in 14 anammox enrichments cultivated at 10-37 °C. "Candidatus Brocadia" appeared to be the dominant organism in all but two laboratory enrichments of "Ca. Scalindua" and "Ca. Kuenenia". At lower temperatures, the membranes of all anammox populations were composed of shorter [5]-ladderane ester (reduced chain length demonstrated by decreased fraction of C20/(C18 + C20)). This confirmed the previous preliminary evidence on the prominent role of this ladderane fatty acid in low-temperature adaptation. "Ca. Scalindua" and "Ca. Kuenenia" had distinct profile of ladderane lipids compared to "Ca. Brocadia" biomasses with potential implications for adaptability to low temperatures. "Ca. Brocadia" membranes contained a much lower amount of C18 [5]-ladderane esters than reported in the literature for "Ca. Scalindua" at similar temperature and measured here, suggesting that this could be one of the reasons for the dominance of "Ca. Scalindua" in cold marine environments. Furthermore, we propose additional and yet unreported mechanisms for low-temperature adaptation of anammox bacteria, one of which involves ladderanes with absent phosphatidyl headgroup. In sum, we deepen the understanding of cold anammox physiology by providing for the first time a consistent comparison of anammox-based communities across multiple environments.
- Keywords
- Anaerobic ammonium oxidation, Candidatus Brocadia, Candidatus Scalindua, Effect of temperature, Ladderane phospholipids,
- MeSH
- Anaerobiosis MeSH
- Anaerobic Ammonia Oxidation * MeSH
- Bacteria * MeSH
- In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence MeSH
- Membrane Lipids MeSH
- Oxidation-Reduction MeSH
- RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics MeSH
- Temperature MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Membrane Lipids MeSH
- RNA, Ribosomal, 16S MeSH
The application of partial nitritation-anammox (PN/A) under mainstream conditions can enable substantial cost savings at wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), but how process conditions and cell physiology affect anammox performance at psychrophilic temperatures below 15 °C remains poorly understood. We tested 14 anammox communities, including 8 from globally-installed PN/A processes, for (i) specific activity at 10-30 °C, (ii) composition of membrane lipids, and (iii) microbial community structure. We observed that membrane composition and cultivation temperature were closely related to the activity of anammox biomasses. The size of ladderane lipids and the content of bacteriohopanoids were key physiological components related to anammox performance at low temperatures. We also indicate that the adaptation of mesophilic cultures to psychrophilic regime necessitates months, but in some cases can take up to 5 years. Interestingly, biomass enriched in the marine genus "Candidatus Scalindua" displayed outstanding potential for nitrogen removal from cold streams. Collectively, our comprehensive study provides essential knowledge of cold adaptation mechanism, will enable more accurate modelling and suggests highly promising target anammox genera for inoculation and set-up of anammox reactors, in particular for mainstream WWTPs.
- Keywords
- activation energy, adaptation to low temperature, anaerobic ammonium oxidation, anammox activity, anammox genus, ladderane phospholipid,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH