Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal

Enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) is an environmental biotechnology of global importance, essential for protecting receiving waters from eutrophication and enabling phosphorus recovery. Current understanding of EBPR is largely based on empirical evidence and black-box models that fail to...

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Main Author: Lawson, Christopher Evan
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/50362
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-503622018-01-05T17:27:40Z Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal Lawson, Christopher Evan Enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) is an environmental biotechnology of global importance, essential for protecting receiving waters from eutrophication and enabling phosphorus recovery. Current understanding of EBPR is largely based on empirical evidence and black-box models that fail to appreciate the driving force responsible for nutrient cycling and ultimate phosphorus removal, namely microbial communities. Accordingly, this thesis focused on understanding the microbial ecology of a pilot-scale microbial community performing EBPR to better link bioreactor processes to underlying microbial agents. Initially, temporal changes in microbial community structure and activity were monitored in a pilot-scale EBPR treatment plant by examining the ratio of small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) to SSU rRNA gene over a 120-day study period. Although the majority of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in the EBPR ecosystem were rare, many maintained high potential activities, suggesting that rare OTUs made significant contributions to protein synthesis potential. Few significant differences in OTU abundance and activity were observed between bioreactor redox zones, although differences in temporal activity were observed among phylogenetically cohesive OTUs. Moreover, observed temporal activity patterns could not be explained by measured process parameters, suggesting that alternate ecological forces shaped community interactions in the bioreactor milieu. Subsequently, a metagenome was generated from pilot plant biomass samples using 454 pyrosequencing. Comparison of microbial community metabolism across multiple metagenomes from different environments revealed that EBPR community function was enriched in biofilm formation, phosphorus metabolism, and aromatic compound degradation, reflective of local bioreactor conditions. Population genomes binned from metagenomic contigs showed that M. parvicella genomes displayed remarkable genomic cohesion across EBPR ecosystems, where functional differences related to biofilm formation and antibiotic resistance, likely reflecting adaptation to habitat-specific selection pressures. Additionally, novel metabolic insights into Gordonia spp. in the EBPR ecosystem suggested a potential role for its involvement in polyphosphate and triacylglycerol cycling. Overall, these findings offer valuable insight on EBPR microbial ecology and will guide future studies aimed at monitoring spatiotemporal patterns in population dyanmics and gene expression. Moreover, this work demonstrates that molecular sequencing approaches can be successfully used to gain deeper insight on microbial communities responsible for wastewater remediation. Applied Science, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Department of Graduate 2014-09-15T15:02:23Z 2014-09-15T15:02:23Z 2014 2014-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/50362 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) is an environmental biotechnology of global importance, essential for protecting receiving waters from eutrophication and enabling phosphorus recovery. Current understanding of EBPR is largely based on empirical evidence and black-box models that fail to appreciate the driving force responsible for nutrient cycling and ultimate phosphorus removal, namely microbial communities. Accordingly, this thesis focused on understanding the microbial ecology of a pilot-scale microbial community performing EBPR to better link bioreactor processes to underlying microbial agents. Initially, temporal changes in microbial community structure and activity were monitored in a pilot-scale EBPR treatment plant by examining the ratio of small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) to SSU rRNA gene over a 120-day study period. Although the majority of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in the EBPR ecosystem were rare, many maintained high potential activities, suggesting that rare OTUs made significant contributions to protein synthesis potential. Few significant differences in OTU abundance and activity were observed between bioreactor redox zones, although differences in temporal activity were observed among phylogenetically cohesive OTUs. Moreover, observed temporal activity patterns could not be explained by measured process parameters, suggesting that alternate ecological forces shaped community interactions in the bioreactor milieu. Subsequently, a metagenome was generated from pilot plant biomass samples using 454 pyrosequencing. Comparison of microbial community metabolism across multiple metagenomes from different environments revealed that EBPR community function was enriched in biofilm formation, phosphorus metabolism, and aromatic compound degradation, reflective of local bioreactor conditions. Population genomes binned from metagenomic contigs showed that M. parvicella genomes displayed remarkable genomic cohesion across EBPR ecosystems, where functional differences related to biofilm formation and antibiotic resistance, likely reflecting adaptation to habitat-specific selection pressures. Additionally, novel metabolic insights into Gordonia spp. in the EBPR ecosystem suggested a potential role for its involvement in polyphosphate and triacylglycerol cycling. Overall, these findings offer valuable insight on EBPR microbial ecology and will guide future studies aimed at monitoring spatiotemporal patterns in population dyanmics and gene expression. Moreover, this work demonstrates that molecular sequencing approaches can be successfully used to gain deeper insight on microbial communities responsible for wastewater remediation. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Civil Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Lawson, Christopher Evan
spellingShingle Lawson, Christopher Evan
Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
author_facet Lawson, Christopher Evan
author_sort Lawson, Christopher Evan
title Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
title_short Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
title_full Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
title_fullStr Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
title_full_unstemmed Population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
title_sort population dynamics and metabolic potential of a pilot-scale microbial community performing enhanced biological phosphorus removal
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/50362
work_keys_str_mv AT lawsonchristopherevan populationdynamicsandmetabolicpotentialofapilotscalemicrobialcommunityperformingenhancedbiologicalphosphorusremoval
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