Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Water Research journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/watres In-situ expressions of comammox Nitrospira along the Yangtze River Shufeng Liu a,b,1, Hetong Cai a,b,1, Jiawen Wang a,b, Haiying Wang a, Tong Zheng a,b,c, Qian Chen a,b,d, Jinren Ni a,b,d,∗ a Key Laboratory of Water and Sediment Sciences, Ministry of Education, College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China b State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of All Material Fluxes in River Ecosystems, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China c South China Institute of Environmental Sciences, Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP), Guangzhou 510655, China d State Key Laboratory of Plateau Ecology and Agriculture, Qinghai University, Xining 810016, China a r t i c l e i n f o Article history: Received 8 February 2021 Revised 7 May 2021 Accepted 9 May 2021 Available online 13 May 2021 Key words: genome-centric metatranscriptomics complete nitrifiers comammox Nitrospira in-situ expression patterns environmental drivers Yangtze River a b s t r a c t The recent discovery of comammox Nitrospira as complete nitrifiers has significantly enriched our understanding on the nitrogen cycle, yet little is known about their metabolic transcripts in natural aquatic ecosystems. Using the genome-centric metatranscriptomics, we provided the first in-situ expression patterns of comammox Nitrospira along the Yangtze River. Our study confirmed widespread expressions of comammox Nitrospira, with the highest transcription accounting for 33.3% and 63.8% of amoA and nxrAB genes expressed in ammonia-oxidizing prokaryotes (AOPs) and Nitrospira sublineages I/II, respectively. Moreover, comammox two clades differed in nitrification, with clade A acting as the dominator to ammonia oxidation in comammox, and clade B contributing more transcripts to nitrite oxidation than to ammonia oxidation. Compared to canonical Nitrospira, comammox community had lower expressions of ammonia/nitrite transporters and nitrogen assimilatory genes, but far higher expressions in urea transport and hydrolysis, facilitating to derivation of ammonia and energy mainly through intracellular ureolytic metabolism. This suggests no need for “reciprocal-feeding” between canonical Nitrospira and AOPs in a natural river. Aerobic mixotrophy of comammox bacteria was suggested by expressions of genes coding for respiratory complexes I-V, oxidative/reductive TCA cycle, oxygen stress defenses, and transport/catabolism of simple carbohydrates and low-biosynthetic-cost amino acids. Intriguingly, significant positive correlations among expressions of ammonia monooxygenases, hydroxylamine dehydrogenase and copper-dependent nitrite reductase indicated that comammox Nitrospira had the potential of converting nitrite to nitric oxide accompanied by ammonia oxidation under low-C/N and aerobic conditions, while gene expressions in this pathway were significantly and positively associated with pH. Overall, this study illustrated novel transcriptional characteristics of comammox Nitrospira, and highlighted the necessity of reassessing their contributions to biogeochemical carbon and nitrogen cycling with perspective of in-situ meta-omics as well as culture experiments. © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. 1. Introduction Nitrification has been assumed as a two-step process mediated by distinct chemolithoautotrophic microbes: ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) (Könneke et al., 2005) or bacteria (AOB), followed by nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) (Teske et al., 1994). However, the recently discovered complete ammonia-oxidizing (comammox) Nitrospira, catalyzing ammonia oxidation to nitrate in single organisms, have fundamentally updated the long-held dogma of two∗ Corresponding author: Jinren Ni, Peking University, No. 5 Yiheyuan Road, Beijing 100871, China, Telephone number: +86-10-62751185 E-mail address: [email protected] (J. Ni). a The first two authors contributed equally to this work. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2021.117241 0043-1354/© 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. step nitrification (Daims et al., 2015; van Kessel et al., 2015; Pinto et al., 2016; Palomo et al., 2016). So far, all known comammox bacteria belong to sublineage II of Nitrospira, which represents the most diverse NOB clade (Poghosyan et al., 2019). Comammox Nitrospira harbor a full series of ammonia monooxygenases (AMO), hydroxylamine dehydrogenases (HAO) and nitrite oxidoreductases (NXR) driving complete nitrification (Daims et al., 2015; van Kessel et al., 2015). The amo operons of comammox Nitrospira form two divergent clades, named as comammox clades A and B, which are phylogenetically distant from homologs of AOA and AOB (Daims et al., 2015; van Kessel et al., 2015). Comammox Nitrospira are the third group of ammoniaoxidizing prokaryotes (AOPs), contributing largely to nitrifier abundances and activity on Earth. For example, comammox Nitrospira S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 have been observed to be the most abundant AOPs or occupy high proportions in overall Nitrospira of engineered habitats, including drinking water systems (Wang et al., 2017), groundwater wells (Daims et al., 2015), groundwater-fed rapid gravity sand filters (Palomo et al., 2016; Fowler et al., 2018), recirculating aquaculture systems (Bartelme et al., 2017) and biological nutrient removal systems (Daims et al., 2015; Camejo et al., 2017; Zhao et al., 2019; Cotto et al., 2020). Global-, continental- or region-scale studies have indicated that comammox Nitrospira outnumber canonical AOPs or Nitrospira in natural ecosystems including freshwater (Palomo et al., 2019), soils (Hu and He, 2017; Palomo et al., 2019; Osburn and Barrett, 2020) and sediments (Shi et al., 2020; Y. Xu et al., 2020; Zhang et al., 2020). Higher ammonia-oxidation activity of comammox Nitrospira than those of either AOA or AOB has been demonstrated in some wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) (Zheng et al., 2019) as well as pasture, arable, forest and paddy soils (Li et al., 2019; Wang et al., 2019). In recent years, genome-centric metagenomics has been utilized to gain the taxonomic and functional information of uncultured species from complex microbial assemblages (Speth et al., 2016). To date, multiple high-quality draft genomes of comammox Nitrospira have been reconstructed to interpret their taxonomic affiliations, metabolic potentials, evolutionary history besides relative abundances in environments (Daims et al., 2015; van Kessel et al., 2015; Pinto et al., 2016; Camejo et al., 2017; Wang et al., 2017; Lawson and Lücker, 2018; Palomo et al., 2018; Koch et al., 2019). Comparative genomics has demonstrated the niche specialization among comammox clades and canonical nitrifiers in carbon and nitrogen metabolisms, alternative electron donors, energy conservation and transduction, and stress response and defense mechanisms (Camejo et al., 2017; Lawson and Lücker, 2018; Palomo et al., 2018; Koch et al., 2019). Comammox Nitrospira might utilize mixotrophic metabolisms as well as tolerate microaerobic and oligotrophic conditions (Palomo et al., 2018). The identification of novel metabolic pathways and interactions among key nitrifiers has revolutionized our understandings of nitrogen-cycling microbes, requiring further validation at the transcriptional level (Lawson and Lücker, 2018; Koch et al., 2019). Genome-centric metatranscriptomics can provide exact information about the insitu expression patterns of a vast number of functional genes comprehensively. It is urgent to characterize the community-wide expression profiles of comammox Nitrospira by a combination of genomic and transcriptomic data in the environments. Rivers are of primary importance in coupling the biogeochemical cycle between continents and oceans (Li et al., 2020). Global rivers transport millions of tons of bioavailable nitrogen annually (Meybeck, 1982), in which human activities contribute to increasing nitrogen input (Koch et al., 2015). Nitrifiers, associated with denitrifiers and anammox bacteria, are crucial to maintain the balance of nitrogen load in large rivers (Huang et al., 2018). Previous studies have demonstrated the widespread existence of comammox Nitrospira, and the significant influences of environmental factors on their relative abundances and metabolic functions in rivers (Black and Just, 2018; Liu et al., 2020; Zhang et al., 2020). Moreover, newly recovered comammox Nitrospira genomes have improved the phylogenomic resolution to facilitate further research on biogeography (Liu et al., 2020). Nevertheless, the lack of knowledge so far about the in-situ expression profiles of comammox Nitrospira in large rivers restrains our understanding of the ecological significances of complete nitrification in complex natural freshwater habitats. To address this issue, we implemented synchronous monitoring along the Yangtze River, the largest river in Asia, and obtained the first in-situ expression profiles of comammox Nitrospira using the genome-centric metatranscriptomics. Our study demonstrated the widespread expressions of comammox Nitrospira, with the high- est transcriptional level in the most upstream site of study area. Particularly, a difference of nitrification characteristics between comammox clade A and B was found. Compared to canonical Nitrospira, comammox community had lower expressions of ammonia/nitrite transporters and nitrogen assimilatory genes but higher expressions in urea degradation, enabling them to derive ammonia and energy intracellularly. This implied no need for “reciprocalfeeding” between canonical Nitrospira and AOPs. Comammox bacteria might potentially transform nitrite to nitric oxide (NO) during ammonia oxidation under low-C/N and aerobic conditions, and gene expressions in this pathway were closely related with pH. 2. Materials and Methods 2.1. Sample collection and environmental data measurement The nitrogen load along the mainbody of the Yangtze River has drawn great attention (Liu et al., 2018). A thorough understanding of metabolic characteristics of comammox Nitrospira and canonical nitrifiers is critical for optimizing nitrogen-load management strategies therein. In March 2018, planktonic microbial biomass for metatranscriptomic sequencing was synchronously sampled in ten national hydrologic stations from YiBin (YB) in the upper reach to XuLiuJing (XLJ) in the estuary (Fig. 1a; Table S1), where we could be aided with sufficient equipment and licenses from Changjiang Water Resources Commission for the RNA sampling campaign. The longitude and latitude of each site were recorded by GPS device (Magellan, USA), and the curvilinear distances between pairwise sites were calculated using ArcGIS (v 10.3). No extreme weather took place during the sampling period. At each site, 20 L surface water was collected in the midstream position with a depth of 0.5 m, then was divided into several parts at a time and passed through multiple 0.22 μm polycarbonate membranes (Millipore, USA) to capture the biomass immediately. All filtered membranes were kept in 50 mL sterile and RNase-free tubes, and snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen until RNA extraction. Total time from the beginning of filtration to snap-freezing was ~12 min. Another 5 L surface water was collected for measurements of environmental factors, including temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen (DO), chemical oxygen demand (COD), total nitrogen (TN), ammonia (NH3 -N), nitrite (NO2 -N), nitrate (NO3 -N), total phosphorus (TP), conductivity, hardness and suspended solid (SS) concentration according to the issued protocols by Ministry of Ecology and Environment of China. The environmental factors of each water sample were displayed in Fig. S1. 2.2. RNA extraction, metatranscriptomic sequencing and bioinformatic pipeline The 0.22-μm filtered membranes were shattered and added to extraction tubes. Total RNA of each sample was extracted from biomass in multiple times using the FastRNA®Pro Soil-Direct Kit (MP Biomedicals, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instruction. Residual genomic DNA was removed from total RNA using the PureLink®DNase set (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA). Replicated RNA extracts of individual samples were mixed for RNA quality and quantity evaluation by the NanoDrop ND-20 0 0 instrument (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA). RNA integrity was checked using the Bioanalyzer RNA 60 0 0 Nano kit (Agilent Technologies, USA). High-quality nucleic acids (> 2 μg and 100 ng μL−1 ) were obtained for downstream processing. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) was removed using the Ribo-Zero Magnetic Kit (Epicenter, USA). The enriched non-rRNA samples went through library preparation for complementary DNA (cDNA) synthesis using the TruSeqTM RNA Sample Prep Kit (Illumina, USA). The cDNA was sequenced on 2 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Figure 1. In-situ transcriptional abundances of the key ammonia- or nitrite-oxidation genes in comammox Nitrospira and canonical nitrifiers along the Yangtze River. (a) The sampling sites for metatranscriptomic shotgun sequencing over a 2,750 km continuum along the Yangtze River. Detailed information about the sampling sites is listed in Table S1. (b) Expressions of amoA genes in AOPs and nxrAB genes in Nitrospira representatives; (c) Clade-level percentages of expressions of amoABC and nxrAB genes in comammox Nitrospira; (d) Genome-level percentages of expressions of amoABC and nxrAB genes in comammox Nitrospira. The expressions of amoA genes in AOPs are calculated based on the normalized gene hits into the AOPs-amoA database. The expressions of nxrAB genes in Nitrospira genera, and the clade- and genome-level percentages of amoABC and nxrAB genes in comammox Nitrospira are calculated based on the normalized hits into the corresponding genes of 36 Nitrospira genomes. 3 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 the Illumina HiSeq X Ten platform (Majorbio Company, Shanghai, China) to generate 150 bp paired-end reads with an insert size of 300 bp. All raw metatranscriptomic datasets can be found at the NCBI Sequence Read Archive under accession numbers SRR13151498-SRR13151507. Raw paired-end reads were initially pretreated using Sickle (v 1.200) (-q 20 -l 50) (https://github.com/najoshi/sickle) and NGS QC Toolkit (v 2.3.3) (-l 70 -s 20) (Patel and Jain, 2012). Then, rRNA sequences were trimmed off using SortMeRNA (v 2.0) (– num_alignments 1 -e 10−10 ) based on SILVA database for bacterial, archaeal and eukaryotic sequences (Kopylova et al., 2012). Clean non-rRNA reads from large datasets were randomly split into small pieces, and individually de novo assembled into transcript sequences with a minimum length of 500 bp using Trinity (v 2.8.1) (Grabherr et al., 2011). Statistics of raw RNA reads, clean non-rRNA reads and assemblies of each dataset were summarized in Table S2. Open reading frames (ORFs) were predicted on the assembled sequences using TransGeneScan (v 1.2.1) (Ismail et al., 2014). Clean non-rRNA reads were mapped back to the predicted nucleotide ORFs using BBMap (v 37.48) (https: //sourceforge.net/projects/bbmap) with minimum identity of 90%. Read counts were calculated for each ORF and normalized as RPKM values (Reads per kilobase per million mapped reads). All ORFs were searched against Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) database for functional annotation using DIAMOND (v 0.8.38) with the parameters “-e 1e-5 -f 6 -k 1” (Buchfink et al., 2015). Key ammonia-oxidation transcript sequences were queried against the NCBI non-redundant (nr) database using BLASTP (v 2.2.31+) for manual inspection. related genes were identified by profile Hidden Markov Model searches against Carbohydrate-Active enZYmes (CAZy) database (Lombard et al., 2014). Metabolic reconstruction was based on KEGG pathway maps. The subcellular localization of the identified glycoside hydrolases and peptidases were predicted using CELLO (v 2.5) (Yu et al., 2004). Clean non-rRNA reads of each dataset were searched against the NCBI nr database using DIAMOND, with the following analysis in MEGAN (v 6.11.1) (Huson et al., 2007) using the lowest common ancestor algorithm to extract Nitrospira reads based on the taxonomy (Black and Just, 2018). BBMap was applied to align all these Nitrospira reads against the genomic nucleotide ORFs with a minimum identity of 90%. Such two-stage alignments might facilitate to extract comammox reads more accurately. According to Liu et al. (2020), Cotto et al. (2020) and controlled experiments in this study (see Supplementary Information), a minimum alignment identity of 90% could reduce cross-assignments of reads between comammox and canonical Nitrospira genomes used herein. Especially, no cross-assignments was observed for key nitrogen-cycling genes between comammox and canonical Nitrospira. For comparisons of the ammonia- or nitrite-oxidation transcriptional abundances among distinct Nitrospira communities, read counts for the Nitrospira amoABC or nxrAB genes, respectively, were normalized by sequence depths and expressed as the hit numbers per 108 clean non-rRNA reads. For profiling the expressions across different functional genes, read counts were calculated for each genomic ORF and normalized as the RPKM values by mapping reads and ORF lengths. Functional-gene expression levels were inferred based on the overall RPKM values of ORFs assigned to a given orthologous gene of KEGG or COG. 2.3. Phylogenetic analysis of key ammonia-oxidation transcript sequences 2.5. Statistical analysis All statistical analyses were performed based on the community-wide expression profiles of comammox Nitrospira and canonical nitrifiers using R language (v 3.5.0; https://www.r-project.org/) or OriginPro 2018. p < 0.05 (with 999 permutations) was considered significant for all statistical tests. Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) (“metaMDS” function in vegan) was used to visualize the Bray-Curtis dissimilarities of orthologous-gene expression compositions between comammox and canonical Nitrospira. Analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) (“anosim” function in vegan) was then conducted to test the significance of difference. Distance-based redundancy analysis (dbRDA) (“capscale” function in vegan) was executed to quantify the overall effects of environmental factors and geographic distance on orthologous-gene expression compositions of comammox and canonical Nitrospira (Supplementary Information). Pairwise Spearman’s (“rcorr” function in Hmisc) or Pearson’s correlations among the expressions of key nitrification-related genes and environmental factors were calculated to identify niche preferences. All key amo and hao amino-acid transcript ORFs of comammox Nitrospira were identified based on the above functional annotation results. Some reference and outgroup sequences were also downloaded from the NCBI protein database. All sequences were aligned using MAFFT (v 7.310) (Katoh and Standley, 2013). The alignments were then trimmed using TrimAl (v 1.3) (Capella-Gutiérrez et al., 2009) to remove poorly aligned regions (i.e., columns composed of over 90% gaps). Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic trees were built based on 1,0 0 0 bootstraps using FastTree (v 2.1) (Price et al., 2010), where a Jones-Taylor-Thornton evolutionary model and CAT approximation with 20 rate categories were employed. 2.4. Evaluation of in-situ expressions of comammox Nitrospira and canonical nitrifier communities To compare the ammonia-oxidation transcriptional abundances among comammox Nitrospira, AOA and AOB communities, a hybrid annotation pipeline (Yang et al., 2014) was conducted to screen clean non-rRNA reads against our manually constructed amoA database. Detailed procedures and parameters refer to our previous study (Liu et al., 2020). The amoA-like hits were normalized by sequence depths among different samples, which were expressed as the hit numbers per 108 clean non-rRNA reads. To obtain the expression profiles of comammox versus canonical Nitrospira, genome-centric metatranscriptomics strategies were executed as follows. A wide range of 36 Nitrospira genomes comprising of 27 separate species were downloaded from the available databases to form the reference pool (Table S3), which were the representatives covering the most concerning metabolic features of Nitrospira. ORFs were predicted for all genomes using Prodigal (v 2.6.3) (Hyatt et al., 2010), and queried against the KEGG and Clusters of Orthologous Groups (COG) databases using DIAMOND as described above. Additionally, a set of carbohydrate- 3. Results and discussion 3.1. Evidence for transcription of comammox Nitrospira Comammox Nitrospira transcription or activity has been detected in natural ecosystems such as soils and freshwater sediments, whereas most studies relied on enrichment cultures or microcosm experiments instead of in-situ (Yu et al., 2018; Wang et al., 2019; Li et al., 2019). To deepen our understandings, metatranscriptomics was utilized here to validate the in-situ expressions of comammox Nitrospira in the Yangtze River. For all samples, 547 transcript ORFs were assigned to comammox Nitrospira, including 55 ORFs affiliated with comammox amoABC and haoA genes (Table S4). Both amo and hao operons are reliable biomarkers 4 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 for comammox identification (Yu et al., 2018). Phylogenetic trees showed that all amoABC and haoA transcript ORFs fell into comammox clade A clusters, and were closely related to the genes on clade-A-I genomes (e.g., YR-WHU/YR-JJ/YR-XLJ-3) (Fig. S2; Table S3). A total of 50 amoABC and haoA transcript ORFs were assembled from the most upstream site YB of study area with exceptionally higher expressions (average RPKM = 115.8 and 30.4), whereas only five amoC transcript ORFs were from other sites with lower expressions (average RPKM = 47.4). This might suggest a relatively high potential of ammonia-oxidation activity of comammox Nitrospira in the upper reach of the Yangtze. The number and expression of comammox-related amoC transcript ORFs were larger than those of amoA and amoB, which was consistent with the finding of a previous study (Yu et al., 2018) and could be attributed to multicopy of amoC in most comammox genomes (Koch et al., 2019). Comammox-affiliated transcript ORFs were detected at all sites, suggesting wide expressions of complete nitrifiers along the Yangtze River. We compared the transcriptional abundances of comammox Nitrospira and canonical nitrifiers by searching clean non-rRNA reads against two constructed reference databases. It should be noted that numbers of comammox reads obtained using the AOP-amoA amino-acid database and amoABC-gene sequences on all Nitrospira reference genomes were significantly correlated (Spearman’s r = 0.97, p < 0.001) (Fig. S3), suggesting uniformity of these two methods in assessing comammox ammonia-oxidation transcripts. The nxr gene sequences have also been utilized to investigate the contribution of comammox to overall Nitrospira in nitrite oxidation (Black and Just, 2018; Yu et al., 2018; Fowler et al., 2018), though more ideal methods are needed. Comammox Nitrospira had relatively high transcriptional abundances in site YB, constituting 33.3% and 63.8% of AOPs-amoA and Nitrospira-nxrAB gene expressions, respectively (Fig. 1b). At those sites downstream YB, the transcriptional abundances of canonical AOA/AOB and Nitrospira sublineages I/II outnumbered comammox Nitrospira by 4.0~69.6 and 14.7~149.9 folds, separately. These results suggested that comammox Nitrospira might contribute more to nitrifying activity in the upper reach, though they were found expressed widely, which was consistent with the biogeographic pattern of comammox relative abundance obtained by metagenomics (Liu et al., 2020). Comammox Nitrospira were less abundant and expressed than either AOA or AOB in a few middle- and lower-reach locations along the Yangtze River. Within comammox Nitrospira, clade AI was the most expressed community in ammonia oxidation, accounting for an average of 79.5% (50~100%) of comammox-amoABC gene expressions (Fig. 1c). This was generally uniform with the above results obtained through ORFs identification. Clade A-I was also the most abundant comammox community over the mainbody of this large river (Liu et al., 2020). Li et al. (2019) and Zheng et al. (2019) reported that clade A were the most active comammox in some agricultural soils (N. inopinata cluster in AI) and WWTPs (Ca. N. nitrosa cluster in A-II), but the dominant active species were quite different from those in the Yangtze River (YR-WHU/YR-JJ/YR-XLJ-3/SG-bin2 in A-I) (Fig. 1d; Table S3). These findings confirmed broad and flexible niches of comammox clade A in natural and engineered environments, as also suggested by Palomo et al. (2019) based on the global survey. The most expressed clade-A species were all associated with groundwater, drinking water and riverine ecosystems (Fig. 1d; Table S3), indicating similar active comammox species among these environments. Notably, clade B contributed far more to comammox-nxrAB gene expressions (average 28.6%, up to 60.6%) than to amoABC gene expressions (average 1.3%), and outcompeted clade A in two sampling sites (Fig. 1c), which suggested a more critical role of clade B in nitrite oxidation than in ammonia oxidation. No cladeB amoABC ORFs were found on the de novo assembled transcript Figure 2. Spearman’s correlations (r) between the nitrite-oxidation (nxrAB) transcriptional abundance of comammox clade B, and ammonia- (amoA) or nitriteoxidation (nxrAB) transcriptional abundances of canonical nitrifiers. Color solid lines indicate the ordinary least square linear regressions, with the shaded area representing 95% confidence intervals. The r and p values of Spearman’s correlations are stated. contigs, either (Fig. S2). Moreover, the clade-B nxrAB expressions and its percentage in comammox nxrAB expressions were all significantly and positively correlated with the amoA and nxrAB expressions of canonical AOPs and Nitrospira (Spearman’s r = 0.82~0.95, p ≤ 0.003) (Fig. 2). Thus, clade B were speculated to perform the similar nitrifying feature as canonical Nitrospira in this river reach, where they might be fed by AOA and AOB. On one hand, distinct nitrifying niches of comammox two clades might be due to the fact that they harbored different ammonia uptake systems. Clade B encode MEP-type ammonia transporters with higher affinity and lower uptake capacity, while clade A encode Rh-type transporters with lower affinity and higher uptake capacity (Palomo et al., 2018). Clade A, rather than clade B, might adapt to the mainstream of the Yangtze River with relatively higher ammonia contents (Liu et al., 2020). On the other hand, high dissimilarity of amoA gene sequences between clades A and B might be another reason for their distinct niches in the ammonia-oxidation process (Palomo et al., 2018). For instance, clade B possessed more abundant amoA genes than clade A in relatively oligotrophic groundwater systems and Upper Yangtze River (Fowler et al., 2018; Liu et al., 2020). Zheng et al. (2019) detected no ammonia-oxidation activity of clade B but largely active clade A in various ammonia-enriched WWTPs. Wang et al. (2019) revealed that clade B could autotrophically grow in forest and paddy soils only in the absence of ammonia amendment. Theoretically, shortening nitrification pathway with loss of ammonia-oxidation capacity might result in an increased ATP production rate (other than yield) for clade B, a phylogenetic group residing between canonical Nitrospira sublineages I and II (Palomo et al., 2018). Although more efforts are needed to illustrate the ammonia- and nitrite-oxidation kinetics of yet uncultured clade B, the comammox two clades may differ in nitrification characteristics along the Yangtze River, and the nitrite-oxidation ability of clade B should be highlighted. 5 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Figure 3. Predicted expression patterns of comammox and canonical Nitrospira communities in the Yangtze River. Pathway arrows or gene names related to carbon metabolism, aromatic compound cleavage, oxidative phosphorylation, hydrogen metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, stress response and resistance, and membrane transporters are labeled in distinct colors, respectively. Dashed color arrows indicate the incomplete pathways due to expression loss of a few key genes. Solid grey arrows indicate near-complete pathways with expression loss of only one gene. Pathway or gene expression levels are illustrated by color gradients drawn on various shapes (e.g. circles, squares, ellipses and polygons). For shapes with two separate parts, the color gradients of the left (or upper) and right (or lower) parts indicate the expression levels of corresponding pathways or genes in comammox and canonical Nitrospira communities, respectively. For individual shapes with no division, the color gradients indicate the expression level of corresponding pathways or genes in comammox Nitrospira. Details of expression levels refer to Tables 1, S5 and S6. For clarity of the schematic, the subcellular locations of genes were ignored unless indicated. Abbreviations of amino acids are labeled in bold fonts with light-grey background. “??”, unconfirmed pathway; G6P, glucose 6-phosphate; G1P, glucose 1-phosphate; F6P, fructose 6-phosphate; G3P, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate; PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; Ru5P, ribulose 5-phosphate; X5P, xylulose 5-phosphate; R5P, ribose 5-phosphate; PRPP, 5-phosphoribosyl diphosphate; S7P, sedoheptulose 7-phosphate; E4P, erythrose 4-phosphate; Succ, succinate; Fum, fumarate; Oxa, oxaloacetate; Cit, citrate; Iso, isocitrate; 2-Oxo, 2-oxoglutarate; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; LPT, lipoprotein; TRX, thioredoxin; UDP, uridine diphosphate; GlcNAc, N-acetylglucosamine; Pi, inorganic phosphate; PPP, pentose phosphate pathway. 3.2. Expression patterns of comammox Nitrospira community greater than those of complete nitrifiers. Similar to betaproteobacterial AOB, all studied comammox genomes harbor genes for either heme exporter (ccmABCD) or cytochrome c-biogenesis (ccmEFGH) proteins, which are absent in most canonical Nitrospira sublineages I/II (Fig. S6). The expressions of all these genes were observed for comammox instead of canonical Nitrospira. Comammox amo, hao and ccm operons are located in the proximate genomic region, and the expressions of almost full series of ccm genes may confer an advantage in biosynthesis or activation of AMO and HAO (van Kessel et al., 2015). Compared to canonical Nitrospira, comammox Nitrospira had a higher diversity and transcriptional level of expressed copper-homeostasis genes (e.g., copACD). Such gene expressions might confer increasing Cu2+ uptake or higher Cu2+ tolerance in large rivers, as comammox bacteria may demand more copper as cofactor for AMO biosynthesis than canonical Nitrospira (Palomo et al., 2018). Besides nitrification-related genes, all analyzed Nitrospira genomes encode copper-dependent nitrite reductases (nirK) that form NO from nitrite in denitrifying organisms and some other nitrifiers (Fig. S6). Interestingly, comammox Nitrospira possessed a high expression for nirK (average RPKM = 3871.0), which was the fourth most transcribed gene in comammox transcripts and exhibited 55.0-fold larger than that of canonical Nitrospira (Fig. S5; Table 1). A NO-responsive regulator (nnrS) associated with nitrosative stress resistance was also expressed. Similarly, Black and Just (2018) observed highly abundant nirK genes of comammox We obtained an integrated transcriptional atlas of comammox Nitrospira by gathering the data from all samples. NMDS showed that the orthologous-gene expression compositions of comammox species were different from those of canonical Nitrospira, which were further confirmed by ANOSIM (r = 0.28, p = 0.004) (Fig. S4). Comammox and canonical Nitrospira had 1,546 and 1,585 transcribed orthologous genes, respectively, in which clade A (n = 1,539) had a higher diversity of transcribed orthologous genes than clade B (n = 158). Clade-A active genes recruited 75.8-fold higher number of transcriptional sequences than clade B. 3.2.1. Nitrogen metabolism Distinct expression patterns of the key nitrogen-cycling genes were observed between comammox and canonical Nitrospira, depicting niche specialization among nitrifiers in this freshwater ecosystem (Fig. 3; Table 1). Comammox Nitrospira had large expressions of all key genes involved in complete nitrification, occupying 11.0% of comammox transcripts. AmoC was the most transcribed gene for comammox (Fig. S5). Besides low amoABC expressions, clade B also possessed a low expression level of haoA gene (average RPKM = 4.5), and were then confirmed to play a teeny role in ammonia and hydroxylamine oxidation. For canonical Nitrospira, nxrAB were the most transcribed genes, the expressions of which accounted for 13.7% of total transcripts and displayed 6 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Table 1 Distinct expression patterns of the key nitrogen-cycling genes of comammox and canonical Nitrospira communities in the Yangtze River. Orthologous genes in KEGG or COG databases Comammox Nitrospira RPKM ammonia monooxygenase subunit B (amoA) ammonia monooxygenase subunit B (amoB) ammonia monooxygenase subunit C (amoC) hydroxylamine dehydrogenase (haoA) nitrite oxidoreductase, alpha subunit (nxrA) nitrite oxidoreductase, beta subunit (nxrB) heme exporter protein A (ccmA) heme exporter protein B (ccmB) heme exporter protein C (ccmC) heme exporter protein D (ccmD) cytochrome c-type biogenesis protein ccmE cytochrome c-type biogenesis protein ccmF cytochrome c-type biogenesis protein ccmG cytochrome c-type biogenesis protein ccmH copper exporting P-type ATPase (copA) copper resistance protein C (copC) copper resistance protein D (copD) putative copper export protein (COG1276) c copper-dependent nitrite reductase (NO-forming) (nirK) nnrS protein involved in response to NO NO reductase norQ protein NO reductase activation protein (COG4548) c regulator of NO reductase transcription (COG3901) c Rh-type ammonia transporter MEP-type ammonia transporter urea transport system substrate-binding protein urtA urea transport system permease protein urtB urea transport system permease protein urtC urea transport system ATP-binding protein urtD urea transport system ATP-binding protein urtE urease gamma subunit ureA urease beta subunit ureB urease alpha subunit ureC urease accessory protein ureF urease accessory protein ureG urease accessory protein ureH carbamate kinase (arcC) glutamate synthase (NADPH) large chain (gltB) glutamate synthase (NADPH) small chain (gltD) glutamate dehydrogenase (NAD(P)+) (gdhA) glutamine synthetase (glnA) nitrogen regulatory protein PII (COG0347) c nitrate/nitrite transport system substrate-binding protein nrtA nitrate/nitrite transport system permease protein nrtB nitrate/nitrite transport system ATP-binding protein nrtC nitrate/nitrite transporter narK nitrite transporter nirC nitrite reductase (NADH) small subunit (nirD) ferredoxin-nitrite reductase (nirA) a Percentage (%) Canonical Nitrospira b RPKM a Percentage (%) 2414.6 2102.3 26489.4 1923.1 2771.2 1630.4 20.6 74.9 391.0 619.1 258.7 207.0 211.9 343.9 90.7 26.3 17.4 62.2 3871.0 0.71 0.62 7.79 0.57 0.81 0.48 0.0061 0.022 0.11 0.18 0.076 0.061 0.062 0.10 0.027 0.0077 0.0051 0.018 1.14 NA NA NA NA 54730.0 44394.8 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 367.5 59.4 NA NA ND 70.4 NA NA NA NA 7.54 6.12 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 0.051 0.0082 NA NA ND 0.0097 44.8 104.8 21.9 12.2 0.013 0.031 0.0065 0.0036 ND 314.8 81.5 269.5 ND 0.043 0.011 0.037 12.2 ND 2881.0 0.0036 ND 0.85 NA 58.6 ND NA 0.0081 ND 232.4 62.6 178.7 0.068 0.018 0.054 ND ND ND ND ND ND 47.2 0.014 ND ND 3.6 126.7 88.5 40.6 16.1 630.6 527.8 72.8 62.2 0.0001 0.037 0.026 0.012 0.0047 0.19 0.16 0.021 0.018 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 385.2 201.9 ND ND ND ND ND ND ND 0.053 0.028 42.6 141.5 50.0 NA 0.013 0.042 0.015 NA 115.5 1063.6 391.8 42.0 0.016 0.15 0.054 0.0058 NA NA 7.9 0.0011 NA NA 4.5 0.0006 ND NA 28.2 NA ND NA 0.0083 NA 6.5 32.3 531.9 19.8 0.0009 0.0045 0.073 0.0027 b “NA”, the corresponding genes are not available on studied genomes (Fig. S6); “ND”, the expressions of corresponding genes are not detected. a Average values among all samples. b Relativizing the RPKM of each orthologous gene by the overall RPKM calculated for total ORFs. c Orthologous genes identified from the COG database. Nitrospira within the mussel sediment of upper Mississippi River (UMR). Kits et al. (2019) suggested that the purely cultured comammox N. inopinata could release NO under oxic conditions, and nirK was the second most abundant protein in its proteome, which supported the above finding in oxygen-saturated river water. Consequently, all metagenomic, metatranscriptomic and kinetic studies implied that nitrate was not the only obligate product during ni- trification in comammox Nitrospira, and the denitrification could lead to NO accumulation. As for other denitrifying genes, all Nitrospira lack the key NO reductases norBC, but encode either a NO reductase activation protein or transcriptional regulator (Fig. S6). Comammox Nitrospira had 3.7~22.1-fold lower expressions of these genes than canonical Nitrospira in the Yangtze River. They are possibly involved in NO detoxification. It was reported that the iso7 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Besides H+ -translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases (nuo), ten comammox genomes harbor an additional type of complex I, i.e., Na+ -transporting NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductases (nqr), though the expressions were relatively low. The prototype of nqr operons is from the marine aerobic bacteria Vibrio alginolyticus (Steuber, 2001), and all identified nqrA sequences on comammox genomes are most closely related to β -AOB by BLASTP to NCBI nr database (identity: 68.2~71.5%), implying acquisition by horizontal gene transfer. Additionally, comammox Nitrospira possessed 8.1-fold higher expressions of hydrogenase-related genes (e.g., hypF/hyfR) than canonical Nitrospira. These genes might confer comammox bacteria the potential of hydrogen oxidation coupled to sulfur reduction (Camejo et al., 2017). Glycoside hydrolases, glycosyltransferases and carbohydrate esterases dominated the transcriptional pool of carbohydrateactive enzymes in Nitrospira (Fig. 3; Table S5). For comammox, GH23, GH109 and GH74 were the most transcribed glycoside hydrolase families, encoding chitin/peptidoglycan lyase, acetylgalactosaminidase/hexosaminidase or glucanase, etc. Genes coding for glucosidase (GH3), amylomaltase (GH77) and amylase (GH13) were also expressed. Although most of them were predicted to be cytoplasmic, some GH23 and GH74 could play important roles in periplasmic or extracellular environments (Fig. 3; Fig. S7). Thus, complete nitrifiers might participate in carbohydrate breakdown for riverine bacterial community. Notably, whether microbes can take up and utilize carbohydrates should depend on transporter activity (Lücker et al., 2010). We indeed detected the expression of a monosaccharide ATP-dependent transport system in comammox rather than canonical Nitrospira, indicating a potential of metabolizing simple sugars. GT2, GT4 and GT51 were the most expressed glycosyltransferase families for comammox Nitrospira, acting on the formation of glycosidic bonds. Particularly, comammox bacteria expressed almost full genes for cellulose, glycogen, DAPtype peptidoglycan or KDO2 -lipid A (a precursor of lipopolysaccharide) biosynthesis, while genes encoding lipoprotein-releasing and lipopolysaccharide-export systems were also transcribed, which suggested carbon storage as cell walls, membranes, intracellular and extracellular polymeric substances. Moreover, comammox bacteria expressed genes encoding catechol 2,3-dioxygenase, monomeric catechol outer-membrane receptor and protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase. The ability of hydrolyzing aromatic rings has been also demonstrated for N. inopinata by Han et al. (2019), gaining fundamental insights into micropollutant transformation by nitrifiers. Comammox and canonical Nitrospira expressed almost full genes encoding central carbon metabolic pathways, including the glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, pentose phosphate pathway and TCA cycle (Fig. 3; Table S5), suggesting they should be able to metabolize hexose sugars (Lücker et al., 2010). They could also use ethanol, acetate and pyruvate for replenishing TCA cycle intermediates. High expressions of pyruvate ferredoxin oxidoreductases were observed (average RPKM = 200.4~5384.9). Some uncultured Nitrospira have been reported to take up pyruvate in wastewater treatment plants (Daims et al., 2001). The oxidative TCA cycle shares most enzymes with the reductive TCA (rTCA) cycle except for citrate synthase (CS) and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (OGDC), while the corresponding key enzymes for rTCA cycle were ATP-citrate lyase (ACL) and 2-oxoacid ferredoxin oxidoreductase (OFOR), respectively (Lücker et al., 2010). We found that comammox bacteria possessed 5.7-fold higher expression of ACL than CS, and 6.0-fold higher activity of OFOR than OGDC. Similar results were observed for canonical Nitrospira. Although complete nitrifiers might benefit from a mixotrophic lifestyle by utilizing extracellular urea or carbohydrates, their autotrophic process by CO2 fixation through rTCA cycle was putatively dominant in the Yangtze River. lated comammox N. inopinata could not denitrify NO to nitrous oxide (N2 O), but produced low N2 O by abiotic conversion of hydroxylamine (Kits et al., 2019). More roles of these NO reduction chaperone genes in Nitrospira remain to be determined in-depth. For ammonia uptake, the expression of Rh-type transporter encoded by comammox clade A was 4.8-fold lower than that of MEPtype transporter of canonical Nitrospira, and its contribution to comammox transcripts (0.0036%) was also lower than that to canonical Nitrospira transcripts (0.0081%) (Table 1). The expression of clade-B ammonia transporter was not detected. It was thus hypothesized that comammox bacteria had relatively weak capacity of utilizing extracellular ammonia sources in the Yangtze River. However, ammonia can also originate from intracellular urea hydrolysis. We detected relatively high expressions of high-affinity urea transporters (urtABCDE), ureases (ureABCFGH) and carbamate kinase (arcC) in comammox Nitrospira, meanwhile, no expressions of the corresponding genes were observed for canonical Nitrospira. Comammox organisms were reported to have an order of magnitude greater potentials for urea degradation than canonical Nitrospira in mussel habitats of UMR (Black and Just, 2018), which was similar with our results. Urea transport and hydrolysis are more common metabolisms in comammox than in canonical Nitrospira (Fig. S6). The observed niche separation in genomes and transcriptomes indicated that complete nitrifiers had advantages in deriving ammonia and energy through ureolytic activity in a natural large river. Koch et al. (2015) had proposed a “reciprocal-feeding” interaction between NOB and AOPs, in which Nitrospira could supply ammonia to AOPs by hydrolyzing urea, while AOPs would subsequently oxidize ammonia to nitrite, offering energy sources for Nitrospira. In the Yangtze River, such reciprocal-feeding seemed not established due to much higher expressions of ureolytic genes in comammox bacteria compared to canonical Nitrospira. A significant and positive correlation was observed between expressions of canonical AOPs-amoA and Nitrospira-nxrAB genes (Pearson’s adjusted R2 = 0.80, p < 0.001, data source from Fig. 1b). Therefore, canonical AOPs might oxidize ammonia to nitrite, providing canonical Nitrospira with energy sources, but no ammonia was produced by canonical Nitrospira through ureolytic activity possibly due to the existence of comammox bacteria in the Yangtze River. For ammonia assimilation, comammox Nitrospira possessed 3.2~7.8-fold lower expressions of glutamate synthase (gltBD), glutamine synthase (glnA) and nitrogen regulatory protein P-II than canonical Nitrospira. The contributions of such gene expressions to comammox transcripts (0.096%) were also lower than those to canonical Nitrospira transcripts (0.28%). Kits et al. (2017) suggested that the growth rate of comammox N. inopinata was slower than those of canonical nitrifiers in oligotrophic and dynamic habitats. More energy production through ammonia oxidation might help comammox organisms (especially clade A) to survive in various environments with many competitors, e.g., canonical nitrifiers. For nitrite uptake/assimilation, no expression was observed for comammox nitrite transporter (narK), but a range of nitrite transporters (i.e., nrtABC, nirC and narK) of canonical Nitrospira were all expressed. More importantly, all studied comammox Nitrospira lack the assimilatory nitrite reductase (nirA) and cytochrome c nitrite reductases (nrfAH) (Fig. S6), and canonical Nitrospira harbored an 18.9-fold higher expression of dissimilatory nitrite reductase (nirD) than comammox organisms. These transcriptomic findings demonstrated that comammox Nitrospira could not utilize nitrite as sole nitrogen source for growth, as proposed by Palomo et al. (2018). 3.2.2. Energy and carbon metabolisms Genes coding for respiratory complexes I-V are highly conserved in Nitrospira (Poghosyan et al., 2019). In the Yangtze River, they were more expressed in canonical Nitrospira (2.0% of transcripts) than in comammox Nitrospira (1.4%) (Fig. 3; Table S5). 8 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Peptides and amino acids are important carbon or energy sources for organisms. Although comammox and canonical Nitrospira expressed many cytoplasmic peptidases, some murein endopeptidases, Zn-dependent carboxypeptidases and aminopeptidases were predicted to be located in outer-membrane, periplasmic or extracellular environments (Fig. 3; Fig. S7). Furthermore, comammox bacteria expressed genes for a range of amino acid transporters and catabolic pathways linking alanine, aspartate, asparagine, glutamate, glutamine, glycine, serine, threonine, cysteine and proline to central metabolisms (Fig. 3; Table S5). This could allow them to utilize proteins and amino acids as alternative carbon or energy sources. Four most highly-biosynthetic-cost amino acids, i.e., phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan and histidine (Akashi and Gojobori, 2002), could be synthesized by comammox bacteria, but the degradation pathways were incomplete and not that expressing for all genomes. This suggested that complete nitrifiers have been selected to potentially degrade low-biosynthetic-cost amino acids. Interestingly, the expressions of alanine dehydrogenase, glutamate dehydrogenase, L-aspartate oxidase, glycine dehydrogenase as well as predicted amidohydrolases (average RPKM = 20.7~306.8) (Table S5) involved in deamination suggested that amino acids were the critical nitrogen and energy source besides urea and free ammonia for comammox Nitrospira. Seven newly recovered comammox genomes from the Yangtze River harbored 1~3 peptidases within their ammonia-oxidation gene clusters for possible co-expressions of peptidases, AMO and HAO (Liu et al., 2020), which would provide genomic evidence for the above transcriptomic findings. Yangtze River. The dbRDA showed that pH and NO2 -N were significantly associated with the compositional variation of orthologousgene expressions of both comammox and canonical Nitrospira (p = 0.002~0.038), while temperature and TN were only related to that of comammox Nitrospira (p < 0.020) (Table S7). The above environmental factors explained a total of 53.2% and 34.5% of expression variation for comammox and canonical Nitrospira, respectively, which were much higher than the overall explanatory proportions by geographic distance (Fig. S8). Moreover, the pure effect (49.3%) of environmental factors on comammox Nitrospira was about 2-fold higher than that (25.1%) on canonical Nitrospira. These observations suggested a critical role of environmental selection in shaping the expression pattern of comammox, rather than canonical Nitrospira. Combined with our metagenomic study (Liu et al., 2020), we confirmed that environmental selection determined the community, abundance and expression variation of comammox Nitrospira along the Yangtze River. Furthermore, specific associations between the expressions of comammox nitrification-related genes and environmental variables were investigated (Fig. 4; Fig. S9). We found significant and positive correlations between pH and the expressions of comammox-amoA, amoC, amoABC, haoA and nirK genes (Spearman’s r = 0.72~0.89, p < 0.020), while no significant correlations were identified between these gene expressions and any other factors including nutrients (p > 0.11). No significant relationships were found between comammox nitriteoxidation expression level and all analyzed environmental factors (p > 0.13). Comammox-amoA abundance was also significantly and positively correlated with pH in the Yangtze River (Liu et al., 2020). S. Xu et al. (2020) demonstrated that comammox Nitrospira preferred to grow in slightly alkaline environments. The optimal pH values for AMO and HAO of canonical AOPs are around 7.0~8.0, however, it remains unknown about that of comammox Nitrospira (Blum et al., 2018). For the freshwater ammonia oxidizers, the influence of pH (7.0~8.5) on the reaction activity should not be ignored (Jones and Hood, 1980). As relatively rare species, comammox bacteria could be sensitive to environmental variation. Although further experiments are needed to verify our observations, pH could be an important indicator for comammox amo and hao expressions in large rivers. No directly significant correlations were observed between TN or NH3 -N and the ammonia-oxidation transcriptional abundances of comammox Nitrospira, because comammox bacteria were likely to have multiple nitrogen sources like ammonia, urea and amino acids from extracellular or intracellular environments. However, we found that the overall expressions of ccmABCDEFGH genes were significantly and negatively correlated with nutrient gradients such as TN, NH3 -N and TP (Spearman’s r = -0.66~-0.82, p < 0.040), which indicated oligotrophic dynamics of heme export and cytochrome c-type biogenesis processes in comammox Nitrospira. These genes are involved in energy transduction (e.g., respiration), CO2 binding and hydroxylamine oxidation, as well as other cellular processes (Sanders et al., 2010). Intriguingly, we obtained significant and positive correlations among expressions of comammox-amoA, amoB, amoC, amoABC, haoA and nirK genes (Spearman’s r = 0.73~0.93, p < 0.020) (Fig. 4). Meanwhile, the expressions of these genes were less or not significantly correlated with comammox-nxrA, nxrB and nxrAB expressions (Spearman’s r = -0.33~0.66, p = 0.038~0.987). Significant positive correlations among amoABC, haoA and nirK expressions implied that comammox Nitrospira had the potential to transform nitrite to NO accompanied by ammonia oxidation under low-C/N (<1.2) and aerobic conditions along the Yangtze River. Despite previous studies did not propose this hypothesis for riverine comammox Nitrospira, the newly recovered bins YR-WHU and YR-XLJ3 from the Yangtze River indeed encode a “fkpA-cytochrome cnirK” gene set in proximate to amo or hao operons within their ammonia-oxidation gene clusters possibly for stable co-expressions 3.2.3. Stress response, defense and resistance For response to environmental stress, ~50 genes encoding oxygen stress defense, multidrug efflux system, metal resistance, salt resistance, and cold and heat shock resistance were mostly expressed in comammox and canonical Nitrospira (Fig. 3; Table S6). Planktonic Nitrospira were exposed to a plethora of DO in water of the Yangtze River (monitoring data: 10.0±0.5 mg/L). Accordingly, catalases, peroxidases, peroxiredoxins, Cu-Zn family superoxide dismutase, chlorite dismutase, or bacterioferritin were highly expressed (1.3% of transcripts), protecting comammox Nitrospira from radicals and reactive oxygen species (Palomo et al., 2018). Compared to comammox, no catalase or superoxide dismutase was transcribed in canonical Nitrospira. Both comammox and canonical Nitrospira also possessed a very high expression of cytochrome bdtype quinol oxidase (average RPKM = 1292.9 and 3153.1, respectively) (Table S5). All studied genomes encode 4~10 copies of this high-affinity enzyme, some of which not only allows organisms to respire oxygen under aerobic states, but also has evolved for oxidative stress protection (Richardson, 20 0 0). Moreover, for response to temperature fluctuation (10.4~15.0°C), the heat and cold shock resistance genes were highly expressed in Nitrospira (0.56~1.1% of transcripts). Comammox Nitrospira had 3.4-fold lower transcripts of cold shock resistance genes but higher expressions of heat shock resistance genes than canonical Nitrospira, suggesting distinct optimum metabolizing temperatures between them. Indeed, our previous study demonstrated that temperature was one of the key factors determining niche separation between planktonic comammox and canonical Nitrospira (Liu et al., 2020). Relatively low expressions of the multidrug efflux system, metal and salt resistance genes were observed for Nitrospira, because the potentially toxic substances (e.g., antibiotics and metals) were not so enriched in fluvial water as sewage (Lücker et al., 2010). 3.3. Environmental effects on expressions of comammox Nitrospira community We further explored how environmental factors influenced the in-situ expressions of comammox Nitrospira community along the 9 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 Figure 4. Environmental effects on expressions of comammox Nitrospira community. Heatmap exhibits the pairwise Spearman’s correlations among environmental factors and expressions of the key nitrification-related genes in comammox Nitrospira community. Scale bars indicate correlation coefficients. Only the significant correlations (p < 0.05) are labeled in circles. The “amo”, “nxr” and “ccm” represent the full series of amoABC, nxrAB and ccmABCDEFGH genes, respectively. Line charts on the top right corner indicate the spearman’s correlations (r) between transcriptional abundances of comammox amoABC, haoA and nirK genes. Color solid lines indicate the ordinary least square linear regressions, with the shaded area representing 95% confidence intervals. The r and p values of Spearman’s correlations are stated. (Liu et al., 2020). Fig. 1d also showed that both YR-WHU and YRXLJ-3 were the major expressed species. These observations suggested that the potential of NO production during ammonia oxidation should not be ignored for comammox Nitrospira in the Yangtze River. Kits et al. (2019) demonstrated that comammox N. inopinata does accumulate NO under aerobic conditions, and highlighted the dependency of NO production on oxygen, however, they did not indicate co-varied expressions of amoABC, haoA and nirK genes. AOB mainly perform nitrifier denitrification under oxygen-limited conditions (Liu et al., 2021), which seems very different from comammox Nitrospira. Although further experiments are needed to demonstrate the process of nitrite reduction to NO for comammox Nitrospira in large rivers, we expect a possible cooperation among comammox Nitrospira, complete and truncated denitrifiers in an appropriate way, as denitrifiers could transform comammox terminal products NO3 -N, NO or N2 O into N2 . This would facilitate a re-evaluation of nitrogen transforming processes in natural ecosystems, and even potentially upgrade and retrofit current schemes for better management of TN. 4. Conclusions Genome-centric metatranscriptomics was utilized to reveal the wide in-situ expressions and novel transcriptional characters of comammox Nitrospira in the Yangtze River. Our study demonstrated a difference of nitrification characteristics between comammox two clades, namely clade A were the most expressed comammox community in ammonia oxidation, while clade B contributed more transcripts to nitrite oxidation than to ammonia oxidation. Comammox Nitrospira possessed lower expressions of ammonia/nitrite transporters and nitrogen assimilatory genes but quite higher expressions in urea transport and degradation than canonical Nitrospira, which implied the restriction of “reciprocalfeeding” between canonical NOB and AOPs in large rivers. Aerobic mixotrophic lifestyle of comammox bacteria was suggested based on the expressions of genes for respiratory complexes I-V, oxidative/reductive TCA cycle, transport and catabolism of simple carbohydrates and amino acids, and oxygen stress defense. Comammox Nitrospira had the potential of nitrite reduction to NO accompa- 10 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 nied by ammonia oxidation under low-C/N and aerobic conditions of the Yangtze River, while gene expressions in this pathway were significantly and positively related with pH. Han, P., Yu, Y., Zhou, L., Tian, Z., Li, Z., Hou, L., Liu, M., Wu, Q., Wagner, M., Men, Y., 2019. Specific micropollutant biotransformation pattern by the comammox bacterium Nitrospira inopinata. Environ. Sci. Technol. 53 (15), 8695–8705. Hu, H.W., He, J.Z., 2017. Comammox—a newly discovered nitrification process in the terrestrial nitrogen cycle. J. Soils Sediments 17 (12), 2709–2717. Huang, S., Chen, C., Jaffé, P.R., 2018. Seasonal distribution of nitrifiers and denitrifiers in urban river sediments affected by agricultural activities. Sci. Total Environ. 642, 1282–1291. Huson, D.H., Auch, A.F., Qi, J., Schuster, S.C., 2007. MEGAN analysis of metagenomic data. Genome Res 17 (3), 377–386. Hyatt, D., Chen, G.L., LoCascio, P.F., Land, M.L., Larimer, F.W., Hauser, L.J., 2010. Prodigal: prokaryotic gene recognition and translation initiation site identification. BMC Bioinformatics 11, 119. Ismail, W.M., Ye, Y., Tang, H., 2014. Gene finding in metatranscriptomic sequences. BMC Bioinformatics 15 (9), S8. Jones, R.D., Hood, M.A., 1980. Effects of temperature, pH, salinity, and inorganic nitrogen on the rate of ammonium oxidation by nitrifiers isolated from wetland environments. Microb. Ecol. 6 (4), 339–347. Katoh, K., Standley, D.M., 2013. MAFFT multiple sequence alignment software version 7: improvements in performance and usability. Mol. Biol. Evol. 30 (4), 772–780. Kits, K.D., Jung, M.Y., Vierheilig, J., Pjevac, P., Sedlacek, C.J., Liu, S., Herbold, C., Stein, L.Y., Richter, A., Wissel, H., Brüggemann, N., Wagner, M., Daims, H., 2019. Low yield and abiotic origin of N2 O formed by the complete nitrifier Nitrospira inopinata. Nat. Commun. 10, 1836. Kits, K.D., Sedlacek, C.J., Lebedeva, E.V., Han, P., Bulaev, A., Pjevac, P., Daebeler, A., Romano, S., Albertsen, M., Stein, L.Y., Daims, H., Wagner, M., 2017. Kinetic analysis of a complete nitrifier reveals an oligotrophic lifestyle. Nature 549 (7671), 269–272. Koch, H., Lücker, S., Albertsen, M., Kitzinger, K., Herbold, C., Spieck, E., Nielsen, P.H., Wagner, M., Daims, H., 2015. Expanded metabolic versatility of ubiquitous nitrite-oxidizing bacteria from the genus Nitrospira. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 112 (36), 11371–11376. Koch, H., van Kessel, M.A.H.J., Lücker, S., 2019. Complete nitrification: insights into the ecophysiology of comammox Nitrospira. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 103 (1), 177–189. Könneke, M., Bernhard, A.E., de la Torre, J.R., Walker, C.B., Waterbury, J.B., Stahl, D.A., 2005. Isolation of an autotrophic ammonia-oxidizing marine archaeon. Nature 437 (7058), 543–546. Kopylova, E., Noé, L., Touzet, H., 2012. SortMeRNA: Fast and accurate filtering of ribosomal RNAs in metatranscriptomic data. Bioinformatics 28 (24), 3211–3217. Lawson, C.E., Lücker, S., 2018. Complete ammonia oxidation: an important control on nitrification in engineered ecosystems? Curr. Opin. Biotech. 50, 158–165. Li, C., Hu, H.W., Chen, Q.L., Chen, D., He, J.Z., 2019. Comammox Nitrospira play an active role in nitrification of agricultural soils amended with nitrogen fertilizers. Soil Biol. Biochem. 138, 107609. Li, L., Ni, J., Chang, F., Yue, Y., Frolova, N., Magritsky, D., Borthwick, A.G.L., Ciais, P., Wang, Y., Zheng, C., Walling, D.E., 2020. Global trends in water and sediment fluxes of the world’s large rivers. Sci. Bull. 65 (1), 62–69. Liu, S., Wang, H., Chen, L., Wang, J., Zheng, M., Liu, S., Chen, Q., Ni, J., 2020. Comammox Nitrospira within the Yangtze River continuum: community, biogeography, and ecological drivers. ISME J 14 (10), 2488–2504. Liu, X., Beusen, A.H.W., Van Beek, L.P.H., Mogollon, J.M., Ran, X., Bouwman, A.F., 2018. Exploring spatiotemporal changes of the Yangtze River (Changjiang) nitrogen and phosphorus sources, retention and export to the East China Sea and Yellow Sea. Water Res 142, 246–255. Liu, T., Liu, S., He, S., Tian, Z., Zheng, M., 2021. Minimization of N2 O Emission through Intermittent Aeration in a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR): Main Behavior and Mechanism. Water 13 (2), 210. Lombard, V., Ramulu, H.G., Drula, E., Coutinho, P.M., Henrissat, B., 2014. The carbohydrate-active enzymes database (CAZy) in 2013. Nucleic Acids Res 42 (D1), D490–D495. Lücker, S., Wagner, M., Maixner, F., Pelletier, E., Koch, H., Vacherie, B., Rattei, T., Sinninghe Damsté, J.S., Spieck, E., Le Paslier, D., Daims, H., 2010. A Nitrospira metagenome illuminates the physiology and evolution of globally important nitrite oxidizing bacteria. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 107 (30), 13479–13484. Meybeck, M., 1982. Carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus transport by world rivers. Am. J. Sci. 282 (4), 401–450. Osburn, E.D., Barrett, J.E., 2020. Abundance and functional importance of complete ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (comammox) versus canonical nitrifiers in temperate forest soils. Soil Biol. Biochem. 145, 107801. Palomo, A., Dechesne, A., Smets, B.F., 2019. Genomic profiling of Nitrospira species reveals ecological success of comammox Nitrospira. bioRxiv 612226. Palomo, A., Fowler, S.J., Gülay, A., Rasmussen, S., Sicheritz-Ponten, T., Smets, B.F., 2016. Metagenomic analysis of rapid gravity sand filter microbial communities suggests novel physiology of Nitrospira spp. ISME J 10 (11), 2569–2581. Palomo, A., Pedersen, A.G., Fowler, S.J., Dechesne, A., Sicheritz-Pontén, T., Smets, B.F., 2018. Comparative genomics sheds light on niche differentiation and the evolutionary history of comammox Nitrospira. ISME J 12 (7), 1779–1793. Patel, R.K., Jain, M., 2012. NGS QC Toolkit: a toolkit for quality control of next generation sequencing data. PLoS ONE 7 (2), e30619. Pinto, A.J., Marcus, D.N., Ijaz, U.Z., Bautista-de lose Santos, Q.M., Dick, G.J., Raskin, L., 2016. Metagenomic evidence for the presence of comammox Nitrospira-like bacteria in a drinking water system. mSphere 1 (1) e0 0 054-15. Poghosyan, L., Koch, H., Lavy, A., Frank, J., van Kessel, M.A.H.J., Jetten, M.S.M., Ban- Author contributions JN and SL designed the research. SL and HC performed the research. SL, HC and JN wrote the paper. JW and QC performed the sampling and sequencing. JW, HW, TZ and QC contributed new ideas and information. All the authors contributed to interpretation of the findings. Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. Acknowledgements Financial supports are from National Natural Science Foundation of China (51721006 and 91647211), National Key Basic Research Program of China (2016YFC0402102), and China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2019M660333). Bioinformatic supports from Majorbio Company and High-performance Computing Platform of Peking University are also acknowledged. Supplementary materials Supplementary material associated with this article can be found, in the online version, at doi:10.1016/j.watres.2021.117241. References Akashi, H., Gojobori, T., 2002. Metabolic efficiency and amino acid composition in the proteomes of Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 99 (6), 3695–3700. Bartelme, R.P., McLellan, S.L., Newton, R.J., 2017. Freshwater recirculating aquaculture system operations drive biofilter bacterial community shifts around a stable nitrifying consortium of ammonia-oxidizing archaea and comammox Nitrospira. Front. Microbiol. 8, 101. Black, E.M., Just, C.L., 2018. The genomic potentials of NOB and comammox Nitrospira in river sediment are impacted by native freshwater mussels. Front. Microbiol. 9, 2061. Blum, J.M., Su, Q., Ma, Y., Valverde-Pérez, B., Domingo-Félez, C., Jensen, M.M., Smets, B.F., 2018. The pH dependency of N-converting enzymatic processes, pathways and microbes: effect on net N2 O production. Environ. Microbiol. 20 (5), 1623–1640. Buchfink, B., Xie, C., Huson, D.H., 2015. Fast and sensitive protein alignment using DIAMOND. Nat. Methods 12 (1), 59–60. Camejo, P.Y., Santo Domingo, J., McMahon, K.D., Noguera, D.R., 2017. Genome-enabled insights into the ecophysiology of the comammox bacterium “Candidatus Nitrospira nitrosa. mSystems 2 (5) e0 0 059-17. Capella-Gutiérrez, S., Silla-Martínez, J.M., Gabaldón, T., 2009. trimAl: a tool for automated alignment trimming in large-scale phylogenetic analyses. Bioinformatics 25 (15), 1972–1973. Cotto, I., Dai, Z., Huo, L., Anderson, C.L., Vilardi, K.J., Ijaz, U., Khunjar, W., Wilson, C., De Clippeleir, H., Gilmore, K., Bailey, E., Pinto, A.J., 2020. Long solids retention times and attached growth phase favor prevalence of comammox bacteria in nitrogen removal systems. Water Res 169, 115268. Daims, H., Lebedeva, E.V., Pjevac, P., Han, P., Herbold, C., Albertsen, M., Jehmlich, N., Palatinszky, M., Vierheilig, J., Bulaev, A., Kirkegaard, R.H., Bergen, M.V., Rattei, T., Bendinger, B., Nielsen, P.H., Wagner, M., 2015. Complete nitrification by Nitrospira bacteria. Nature 528 (7583), 504–509. Daims, H., Nielsen, J.L., Nielsen, P.H., Schleifer, K.H., Wagner, M., 2001. In situ characterization of Nitrospira-like nitrite-oxidizing bacteria active in wastewater treatment plants. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 67 (11), 5273–5284. Fowler, S.J., Palomo, A., Dechesne, A., Mines, P.D., Smets, B.F., 2018. Comammox Nitrospira are abundant ammonia oxidizers in diverse groundwater-fed rapid sand filter communities. Environ. Microbiol. 20 (3), 1002–1015. Grabherr, M.G., Haas, B.J., Yassour, M., Levin, J.Z., Thompson, D.A., Amit, I., Adiconis, X., Fan, L., Raychowdhury, R., Zeng, Q., Chen, Z., Mauceli, E., Hacohen, N., Gnirke, A., Rhind, N., di Palma, F., Birren, B.W., Nusbaum, C., Lindblad-Toh, K., Friedman, N., Regev, A., 2011. Full-length transcriptome assembly from RNA-Seq data without a reference genome. Nat. Biotechnol. 29 (7), 644–652. 11 S. Liu, H. Cai, J. Wang et al. Water Research 200 (2021) 117241 field, J.F., Lücker, S., 2019. Metagenomic recovery of two distinct comammox Nitrospira from the terrestrial subsurface. Environ. Microbiol. 21 (10), 3627–3637. Price, M.N., Dehal, P.S., Arkin, A.P., 2010. FastTree 2–approximately maximum-likelihood trees for large alignments. PLoS ONE 5 (3), e9490. Richardson, D.J., 20 0 0. Bacterial respiration: a flexible process for a changing environment. Microbiology 146, 551–571. Sanders, C., Turkarslan, S., Lee, D.W., Daldal, F., 2010. Cytochrome c biogenesis: the Ccm system. Trends Microbiol 18 (6), 266–274. Shi, Y., Jiang, Y., Wang, S., Wang, X., Zhu, G., 2020. Biogeographic distribution of comammox bacteria in diverse terrestrial habitats. Sci. Total Environ. 717, 137257. Speth, D.R., in ’t, Zandt, M.H., Guerrero-Cruz, S., Dutilh, B.E., Jetten, M.S.M., 2016. Genome-based microbial ecology of anammox granules in a full-scale wastewater treatment system. Nat. Commun. 7, 11172. Steuber, J., 2001. Na+ translocation by bacterial NADH:quinone oxidoreductases: an extension to the complex-I family of primary redox pumps. BBA-Bioenergetics 1505 (1), 45–56. Teske, A., Alm, E., Regan, J.M., Toze, S., Rittmann, B.E., Stahl, D.A., 1994. Evolutionary relationships among ammonia-and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria. J. Bacterio. 176 (21), 6623–6630. van Kessel, M.A.H.J., Speth, D.R., Albertsen, M., Nielsen, P.H., Op den Camp, H.J.M., Kartal, B., Jetten, M.S.M., Lücker, S., 2015. Complete nitrification by a single microorganism. Nature 528 (7583), 555–559. Wang, Y., Ma, L., Mao, Y., Jiang, X., Xia, Y., Yu, K., Li, B., Zhang, T., 2017. Comammox in drinking water systems. Water Res 116, 332–341. Wang, Z., Cao, Y., Zhu-Barker, X., Nicol, G.W., Wright, A.L., Jia, Z., Jiang, X., 2019. Comammox Nitrospira clade B contributes to nitrification in soil. Soil Biol. Biochem. 135, 392–395. Xu, S., Wang, B., Li, Y., Jiang, D., Zhou, Y., Ding, A., Zong, Y., Ling, X., Zhang, S., Lu, H., 2020. Ubiquity, diversity, and activity of comammox Nitrospira in agricultural soils. Sci. Total Environ. 706, 135684. Xu, Y., Liu, G., Hua, Y., Wan, X., Hu, J., Zhu, D., Zhao, J., 2020. The diversity of comammox bacteria and the effect of sewage discharge on their abundance in eutrophic lake sediments. J. Soils Sediments 20 (5), 2495–2503. Yang, Y., Jiang, X.T., Zhang, T., 2014. Evaluation of a hybrid approach using UBLAST and BLASTX for metagenomic sequences annotation of specific functional genes. PLoS ONE 9 (10), e110947. Yu, C., Hou, L., Zheng, Y., Liu, M., Yin, G., Gao, J., Liu, C., Chang, Y., Han, P., 2018. Evidence for complete nitrification in enrichment culture of tidal sediments and diversity analysis of clade a comammox Nitrospira in natural environments. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 102 (21), 9363–9377. Yu, C.S., Lin, C.J., Hwang, J.K., 2004. Predicting subcellular localization of proteins for Gram-negative bacteria by support vector machines based on n-peptide compositions. Protein Sci 13, 1402–1406. Zhang, S., Qin, W., Xia, X., Xia, L., Li, S., Zhang, L., Bai, Y., Wang, G., 2020. Ammonia oxidizers in river sediments of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and their adaptations to high-elevation conditions. Water Res 173, 115589. Zhao, Z., Huang, G., He, S., Zhou, N., Wang, M., Dang, C., Wang, J., Zheng, M., 2019. Abundance and community composition of comammox bacteria in different ecosystems by a universal primer set. Sci. Total Environ. 691, 146–155. Zheng, M., Wang, M., Zhao, Z., Zhou, N., He, S., Liu, S., Wang, J., Wang, X., 2019. Transcriptional activity and diversity of comammox bacteria as a previously overlooked ammonia oxidizing prokaryote in full-scale wastewater treatment plants. Sci. Total Environ. 656, 717–722. 12