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Molecular Microbial Ecology – Application in EEWS (Energy, Environment, Water, and Sustainability) Quan, Zhe-Xue (全 哲 学) School of Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai, China E-mail: [email protected] History of Molecular Microbial Ecology The “Woesian” Revolution Carl Woese – Analysis of 16S rRNA 1) represent a new kingdom “Archaebacteria” 2) A universal and quantitative phylogeny is possible Alignment of a highly conserved region of the 16S/18S rRNA Human Yeast Corn E. coli Green algae Thermophile Homo sapiens S. cereviceae Zea maize Escherichia coli Anacystis nidulans Thermotoga maritima Methanococcus vannielii Thermococcus celer Sulfolobus sulfotaricus ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATTCCAGCTCCAATAGCGTATATTAAAGTTGCTGCAGTTAAAAAG... ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATTCCAGCTCCAATAGCGTATATTAAAGTTGTTGCAGTTAAAAAG... ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATTCCAGCTCCAATAGCGTATATTTAAGTTGTTGCAGTTAAAAAG... ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATACGGAGGGTGCAAGCGTTAATCGGAATTACTGGGCGTAAAGCG... ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATACGGGAGAGGCAAGCGTTATCCGGAATTATTGGGCGTAAAGCG... ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATACGTAGGGGGCAAGCGTTACCCGGATTTACTGGGCGTAAAGGG... ...GTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATACCGACGGCCCGAGTGGTAGCCACTCTTATTGGGCCTAAAGCG... ...GTGGCAGCCGCCGCGGTAATACCGGCGGCCCGAGTGGTGGCCGCTATTATTGGGCCTAAAGCG... ...GTGTCAGCCGCCGCGGTAATACCAGCTCCGCGAGTGGTCGGGGTGATTACTGGGCCTAAAGCG... Three domain theory Prokaryotes Bacteria Eukaryotes Archaea Eukarya Macroorganisms Not include virus Now: uncultured: ~800,000 cultured: ~200,000 Total number of Archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequences retrived from EMBL sequence database and introduced into ARB database over the last 11 years 12000 Uncultivated 10000 Number of sequences Cultivated 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Time 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 “Domain” of Bacteria 1994 - 13 divisions (all cultured) 1997 - 36 divisions 24/12 2008: 30/70 2003 - 53 divisions 26/27 2004 - 80 divisions 26/54 Research Field Bioinformatics Uncultured >95% Cultured <5% Molecular Microbial Ecology Taxonomy Cultivation Classification Ecology Metagenome Microbial Diversity Molecular analysis Nitrogen Cycle Environmental Technology Ecology Removal of organic carbon Carbon cycle (Greenhouse gas) Removal of nitrogen and phosphate Coupling of Carbon and Nitrogen cycles Ammonium-Oxidizing Microorganisms Aerobic Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria Aerobic Ammonium-Oxidizing Archaea Anaerobic Ammonium-Oxidizing (ANAMMOX) Bacteria Diversity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria and Archaea in Changjiang (Yangtze River) Estuary (PNAS 2005, 102, 14683-14688) Diversity of ammonium-oxidizing archaea (Nature, 2005, 437, 543-546) Chongming Island • At the estuary of Yangtze river • The 3rd largest island in China • Area: >1000 square kilometers, increasing >10 square kilometers per year Diversity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria in a Granular Sludge Anaerobic ammoniumOxidizing (ANAMMOX) Reactor ANAMMOX (anaerobic ammonium oxidation) In 1977, the existence of chemolithoautotrophic anammox bacteria was predicted: NH4+ + NO2- → N2 + 2H2O (ΔG= -357 kJ/mol) (Z Allg Mikrobiol, 1977, 17, 491-493) In 1995, it was scientifically confirmed that ANAMMOX is biologically mediated process 15NH + 4 + 14NO3- → 14,15 N2(98%) 5NH4+ + 3NO3- → 4N2 + 9H2O + 2H+ NH4+ + NO2- → N2 + 2H2O (AEM, 1995, 61,1246-1251) ANAMMOX in marine ecological system 30-50% of fixed-nitrogen in marine environment would be removed through ANAMMOX process. Black Sea and Golfo Dulce, Costa Rica (Nature, 2002,422, 608-611; 606-608) Benguela upwelling system (PNAS, 2005, 102,6478-6483) ANAMMOX application in wastewater treatment •Normal nitrogen –removal process: NH4+ + 2O2 → NO3- + H2O + 2H+ NO3- + CH2O → N2 + CO2 •ANAMMOX Process: ( NH4+ + 1.5O2 → NO2- + H2O + 2H+) NH4+ + NO2- → N2 + 2H2O The first full-scale ANAMMOX reactor (2002) at the Dokhaven wastewater treatment plant, Rotterdam, the Netherlands. (http://www.anammox.com/research.html) Reactor operation Artificial Wastewater: NaNO2 + NH4HCO3 (1:1), KH2PO4 10 mg/l, yeast extract 5 mg/l, and TE. Gas Sludge: river sediment (1400 mg VSS/l) Water bath Recycle Effluent Loading rate: 1-130 days: at 0.3 kg NH4+-N/(m3·d) Up to 250 days: 0.4-0.8 kg NH4+-N/(m3·d) (80% removal) 351 days: stable removal 82-86% Sludge sampling: day 377. Influent ANAMMOX reactor Phylogenetic tree based on 16S rRNA gene sequences amplified from the anammox reactor sludge using Planctomycetales-specific primers. Defined as the fifth ANAMMOX genus The relationships of the different families of anammox bacter ia among the Planctomycetes. (Nature Reviews Microbiology 2008, 6, 320-326 ) Metagenomic analysis Anammox bacteria Matched contigs Number of assembled reads Sum of contig length 3042 269,212 (31.7%) 561.25Kb Matched ORFs in Kuenenia 1346 Best match with Kuenenia 3023 Best match with KSU-1 19 Best match with others 145 Cowork with environmental engineers: - Microbial population in ANAMMOX reactor - Isolation of novel species from ANAMMOX reactor - Anaerobic ammonium oxidation with sulfate reduction Biological treatment of metal containing wastewater Biological treatment of heavy metal containing wastewater Heavy metal wastewater Free heavy metals Cyanide-complexed heavy metals High concentration of heavy metals High concentration of cyanide Treatment of heavy metals with sulfate reduction O ff- g a s 10 cm Sulfide production SO42- + 2CH2O + 2H+ H2S + 2H2O + 2CO2 20 cm 10 cm ( IV ) Bacteria Metal sulfide precipitation H2S + Me2+ MeS(s) +2H+ Solid substrates: UASB granule Cow manure 20 cm ( III ) D i re c ti o n o f fl o w S o l i d s u b s tra te s 20 cm ( II ) 15 cm ( S e c ti o n I ) 5 cm 5 cm G ra v e l 12 cm I n fl u e n t Method for recovering heavy metals from the drainage containing heavy metals, 10-0414891, Korea. Acid mine drainage Production (a) FeS2 + 7/2 O2 + H2O → Fe2+ + 2 SO42-+ 2 H+ (b) Fe2+ + 1/4O2 + H+ → Fe3+ + 1/2 H2O (c) FeS2 + 14 Fe3+ + 8 H2O → 15 Fe2+ + 2 SO42-+16 H+ The rate of (b) increase million times by bacteria. Pilot-scale treatment SO42- + 2CH2O + 2H+ → H2S + 2H2O +2CO2 H2S + Me2+ → MeS(s) + 2H+ Anaerobic treatment of cyanide- and metal- containing wastewater Cyanide- and metalcontaining wastewater CN-, [Me(CN) 4]2- Me2+, CN-, Granular sludge 2[Me(CN) 4] (SRB) Cyanide degrading SRB MeS CO2, NH3 6 Sulfate (mM) 5 4 0 mM 0.5 mM 1 mM 2 mM 5 mM 3 2 1 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Time (d) 20 6 Sulfate (mM) 4 Sulfate (mM) Free cyanide Zinc-complexed cyanide Copper-complexed cyanide Nickel-complexed cyanide 5 3 2 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 1 0 0 2 4 6 8 Time (day) 10 12 14 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 Time (d) [ Ni(CN)4]2- -> Ni2+ + CO2 + NH3 Ni2+ + S2- -> NiS Cyanide removal percent Aerobic treatment of metal-complexed cyanide 100 80 60 Re-FC Re-ZC Re-NC 40 20 6h 12 h 24 h 48 h 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Free cyanide (mM) 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0 5 10 15 Time (h) 20 25 Nickel complexed cyanide (mM) Zinc complexed cyanide (mM) Operation time (days) 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 0 5 10 15 Time (h) 20 25 2.0 1.5 1.0 Control Re-FC sludge Re-ZC sludge Re-NC sludge 0.5 0.0 0 5 10 15 Time (h) 20 25 Analysis with DGGE Biological treatment of metal containing wastewater Heavy metal wastewater Free heavy metals Cyanide-complexed heavy metals High concentration of heavy metals Precipitate heavy metal with sulfate reduction Degrade cyanide in sulfate reducing condition High concentration of cyanide Degrade different types cyanide in aerobic condition Monitoring of microorganisms in water Microbial Monitoring for Drinking Water Evaluation of drinking water - Previous: Plate counting of total bacteria and enterobacteria - New: Pathogenic protozoa Cryptosporidium, Giardia - Future: Detection of viruses Detection of viruses: using fecal bacteriophage (host: E. coli, Bacteroides fragilis) using real-time PCR quantification cultivating viruses in cells and detecting with quantum-dot nanocomplexes Change of microbial populations in swimming pools treated with non-chlorine disinfectant Requirement of the company the identity of the organisms found in each sample an idea of the proportions of each (i.e. which are the dominant bacteria/and fungi in each sample) how this dynamic changes over the sampling time during the pool summer if there are distinct differences in the ecology of the two groups of pools that were sampled. Samples 12 swimming pools (6 pools were treated with original chemical and the others treated with new chemicals) Three sites: pool water, sand filter, pipe line 8 sampling times: (June-Sept. two weeks interval) were Construction of clone libraries DNA extraction Liquid nitrogen grinding Enzyme extraction o Lysozyme, Lyticase PCR amplification Reconditioning PCR o (18S, most sand_16S, some water_16S (7 sample) ) Nested PCR o (ITS, all water_16S, some sand_16S) PCR primers 16S o 27F+1390R o 27F+1512R, 519F+1390R 18S o 18S-nu0817+18S-nu1536 ITS o NSA3+NLC2, NSI1 +NLB4 Software for sequence analysis Percent of uncertainty level during microbial identification from different type clone libraries (Sample sources: Swimming Pool) Library type Total number of clones sequenced OTU uncertainty value_0(%) OTU uncertainty value_1(%) OTU uncertainty value_2(%) OTU uncertainty value_3(%) OTU uncertainty value_4(%) OTU uncertainty value_10(%) 16S rRNA gene 11009 79.0 1.2 1.7 0.5 3.9 13.7 ITS 9860 49.8 17.7 7.6 7.1 7.5 10.3 18S rRNA gene 3540 8.8 11.2 29.4 13.1 27.2 10.3 Average content in each sample 30.0 Methylobacterium(甲基杆菌属) 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Major bacterial type Sand-new-good-743(13) Sand-old-good-620(11) Sand-new-bad-652(12) Sand-old-bad-1161(21) Average contents of major types bacteria in different group sand samples. (‘Sand-new-good-743(13)’ means the data is analyzed from the 743 clones from 13 ‘good’ samples treated with new chemical.) The number at X-axis are matching to the order of major bacterial type. Content of Methylobacterium in each swimming pool Chemical Library Sand (%) Water(%) GO 1.8 3.2 GR 1.8 3.3 MA 2.6 1.1 MU 5.2 7.5 SC 18.7 1.9 WI 3.3 4.6 5.6 3.6 BR 0.8 6.6 BT 12.8 11.6 RI 29.0 10.4 ST 32.3 7.8 ZJ 16.8 5.8 ZP 9.4 4.8 16.8 7.8 Old old average New new average Pipe 30.3 Average content in each sample 30.0 Sphingomonas (鞘氨醇单胞菌) 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Major bacterial tpye Water-new-good-855(14) Water-old-good-662(11) Water-new-bad-700(12) Water-old-bad-1288(22) Average contents of major types bacteria in different group water samples. (‘Water-new-good-855(14)’ means the data is analyzed from the 855 clones from 14 ‘good’ samples treated with new chemical.) The number at X-axis are matching to the order of major bacterial type. Turbidity 4 Y=0.033*X+0.44 R2=0.39 3 2 1 0 0 20 40 60 Content of Shingomonas (%) Relationships between turbidity and content of Sphingomonas in the water samples. Alternaria (链格孢) Epicoccum(附球菌) 20.0 Average content in each sample 18.0 Cladosporium (枝孢霉) 16.0 14.0 Candida(念珠菌) 12.0 10.0 8.0 6.0 4.0 2.0 0.0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Major fungal type Sand-new-good-835(14) Sand-old-good-633(11) Sand-new-bad-713(13) Sand-old-bad-1286(22) Average contents of major types fungi identified by ITS gene in different group sand samples. The number at X-axis are matching to the order of major fungal type with ITS analysis. 18 19 Average content in each sample (%) 30.0 Candida 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Major fungal type Water-new-good-710(15) Water-old-good-458(10) Water-new-bad-548(11) Water-old-bad-1195(23) Average contents of major types fungi identified by ITS gene in different group water samples. The number at X-axis are matching to the order of major fungal type with ITS gene analysis. 19 BioEnergy Growth rate of energy consumption per year(%) Growth rate of energy consumption in future 20 years Total Biofuels Production (Thousand Barrels Per Day) 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 United States 223 261 335 457 656 Europe 52 80 130 154 214 Russia 0 0 0 0 0 India 3 4 4 5 5 0.0 0.2 1.5 2.6 3.5 0 0 0 0 0 South Korea 0.1 0.2 0.9 1.8 3.2 China 17 21 28 35 38 Indonesia Vietnam Air Pollution Reated data (ranking) USA Korea (South) India Indonesia Vietnam China 15.43 (114/141) 52.41 (63) 27.55 (93) 51.05 (65) 64.07 (51) 97.07 (28) SO2 emissions per populated area (thousand metric tons/squ) 1680 (38/141) 19430 (2) 1150 (47) 360 (84) 260 (92) 2680 (22) Urban N2O concentration (mg/m3) 60.57 (45/141) 52.86 (65) 29.7 (122) 34.6 (111) 65.5 (30) 71.7 (15) NOx emissions per populated area (thousand metric tons/squ) 1.29 (13/141) 1.24 (14) 0.52 (33) 0.18 (94) 0.56 (32) 0.75 (27) 5788181 (1/195) 455878 (9) 1273175 (4) 295033 (21) CO2 Emissions (kt/1000 people) 19.9 (11/196) 9.5 (34) 1.2 (119) 1.4 (114) 0.9 (129) 3.2 (89) CO2 from fossil fuels 2000 (per $ GDP) (per $100 million) 0.0133 (9/25) 0.0124 (11) 0.0076 (22) 0.0084 (20) - 0.0107 (14) 5.31 (1/25) 2.36 (12) 0.23 (25) 0.29 (24) - 0.59 (22) 3030890 (4/195) 62650 (68) 677010 (10) 884950 (8) 129310 (41) 1972900 (5) 33 (84/195) 63 (20) 23 (115) 49 (42) 41.7 (59) 21 (122) Urban SO2 concentration (mg/m3) CO2 Emissions (kt) CO2 from fossil fuels 2000 (per capita) (per 1 million people) Forest area (sq. km) Forest area > (% of land area) 76095 (41) 4143494(2) Forest area (sq. km/1000 people) 10225 (44/195) 1297 (135) 619 (162) 4012 (87) 1556(126) 1512 (130) Fertiliser consumption (hundred grams/hectare) 1117 (48/141) 1040 (52) 1546 (34) 3416(15) 2825 (21) 5117 (8) Water Polution Related Data (Ranking) USA South Korea India Organic water pollutant (BOD) emissions (Kg/d) 1805861 315177 1519842 732965 6088663 Organic water pollutant (BOD) emissions (Kg/d/worker) 0.13 (47/115) 0.12 (49) 0.2 (14) 0.18 (15) 0.14 (60) chemical industry 14 (9/114) 13 (11) 9.24 (27) 9.17 (13) 14.8 (8) food industry 42 (31/114) 26 (45) 53.7 (14) 53.7 (12) 28.1 (60) metal industry 9.6 (13/94) 11.3 (9) 12.2 (7) 2.5 (19) 20.4 (5) paper &pulp industry 10.6 (35/111) 18.9 (16) 7.6 (46) 8.2 (25) 10.9 (43) textile industry 5.4 (40/114) 13.6 (16) 12.8(19) 19.4 (8) 15.47 (16) Indonesia China Water pollution source (% of total BOD emissions) Source: www.nationmaster.com Energy Petroleum Biosurfactant Application of in-situ microorganisms Coal Desulfuration Bioleaching Biofuel Microalgae Anerobic digestion Hydrogen-gas production MFC (microbial Fuel Cells) Plant: Cellulase Natural Gas Overview 2007 (Billion Cubic Feet) Production Imports Exports Consumption United States 19089 4608 822 23047 Europe 10716 15305 6115 20106 Russia 23064 2059 8377 16746 India 1108 352 0 1460 Indonesia 2422 0 1199 1224 Japan 190 3377 0 3738 South Korea 14 1179 0 1231 2446 138 95 2490 China Enzyme screening for new source of energy Metagenomics (Environmental genomics) Example: Ethanol from starch and lignocellulose Metagenomic screening of applicable cellulase Source: rumen (IM), termite (SIBS), biogas fermentation reactor with rice straw (SIBS) The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science: support sequencing - 485 microbial genomes - 30 microbial communities (metagenomes) Objectives: seek solutions to difficult DOE mission challenges: - alternative sources of energy - cleaning up environmental wastes - understanding biological carbon cycling as it relates to global climate change (sustainability) Identification of novel bacteria Novel Bacteria Novel bacteria list accepted by ICSB (International committee on systematic bacteriology) (as first or corresponding author) Genus novel: Henriciella marina Joostella marina Species novel: Altererithrobacter dongtanensis Flavobacterium dongtanense Pseudomonas caeni Chryseobacterium caeni Azonexus caeni Rhizobium daejeonense Class novel Im WT, Kim KY, Rhee SK, Jung HM, Meng H, Lee ST, & ZX Quan* Description of Fimbriimonadia class nov. of the phylum Armatimonadetes and the diversity and abundance of this class in various environments. Appl Environ Microbiol (submitted) Full genome sequencing Published SCI Papers -First author No. Titles Time Journal 1 Henriciella marina gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel member of the family Hyphomonadaceae isolated from the East Sea 2009.4 J Microbiol (IF 1.5) 2 Diversity of ammonium-oxidizing bacteria in a granular sludge anaerobic ammoniumoxidizing (anammox) reactor 2008.11 Environ Microbiol (IF 4.9) 14 Joostella marina gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel member of the family Flavobacteriaceae isolated from the East Sea. 2008.6. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol (IF 2.1) 1 4 Chryseobacterium caeni sp. nov., isolated from bioreactor sludge. 2007.1 Int J Syst Evol Microbiol (IF 2.1) 13 5 Azonexus caeni sp. nov., a denitrifying bacterium isolated from the sludge of wastewater treatment plant 2006. 5 Int J Syst Evol Microbiol (IF 2.1) 3 6 Rhizobium daejeonense sp. nov., nickelcomplexed cyanide-degrading bacterium 2005. 11 Int J Syst Evol Microbiol (IF 2.1) 12 7 Hydrolyzed molasses as an external carbon source in biological nitrogen removal 2005. 10 Bioresource Technol (IF 4.3) 19 3 Citation Published SCI Papers -Corresponding author No. Time Journal 1 Flavobacterium dongtanense sp. nov., isolated from the rhizosphere of reed in wetland 2010.3 Int J Syst Evol Microbiol (IF 2.1) 2 Bacterial diversity of water and sediment in the Changjiang estuary and coastal area of the East China Sea 2009.11 FEMS Microbiol Ecol (IF 3.6) 3 Pseudomonas caeni sp. nov., denitrifying bacteria isolated from sludge of an anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing bioreactor 2009.10 Int J Syst Evol Microbiol (IF 2.1) 4 Could nested-PCR be applicable for the study of microbial diversity? 2009.8 World J Microbiol Biotechnol (IF 1.1) The bacterial diversity in an anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) reactor community 2009.7 Syst Appl Microbiol (IF 2.6) Analyses of Microbial Consortia in the Starter of Fen Liquor 2009.4 Lett Appl Microbiol (IF 1.6) 5 6 Titles Citation 1 2 Recent Projects –Project manager 2011.1-2013.12 “Study of carbon- and nitrogen- cycle related active microbial population in soil of tidal flat”, Supported by National Natural Foundation of China. 2010.7-2012.6 “Investigation of pollutant contamination and bioremediation potential on the seashores neighboring on the Yellow Sea in Korea and China”, Supported by the NSFC-NRF Scientific Cooperation Program 2008.3-2009.4 “Population of microbiology in fermentation of Fen-liquor” Supported as the Project of Scientific and Technological Innovation in Shanxi province, China. 2007.1-2009.12 “Diversity of anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria and metagenomic research”, Supported by National Natural Foundation of China. 2006.6-2006.12 “Microbial diversity in swimming pools” Supported by one of Chemical Compony in USA 2005.7-2008.3 “Metagenomics of anaerobic nitrogen removal bacteria and isolation of related microorganisms”, Supported by Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology Lab members