Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems

Water reuse is increasingly pursued to alleviate global water scarcity. However, wastewater treatment process does not achieve full removal of biological contaminants from wastewater, and hence some microorganisms and their genetic elements can be disseminated into the reclaimed water distributio...

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Main Author: Wang, Changzhi
Other Authors: Hong, Pei-Ying
Language:en
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10754/660155
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spelling ndltd-kaust.edu.sa-oai-repository.kaust.edu.sa-10754-6601552020-08-26T05:06:59Z Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems Wang, Changzhi Hong, Pei-Ying Biological and Environmental Sciences and Engineering (BESE) Division Pain, Arnab Daffonchio, Daniele Metagenomics Reclaimed Water Bacterial Community Functional Genes Water reuse is increasingly pursued to alleviate global water scarcity. However, wastewater treatment process does not achieve full removal of biological contaminants from wastewater, and hence some microorganisms and their genetic elements can be disseminated into the reclaimed water distribution systems (RWDS). A systematic identification and characterization of these biological contaminants is required. However, a broad characterization for large-scale data are limited. In this study, reclaimed water samples are investigated through metagenomic analyses to assess their bacterial and functional (metal resistance genes (MRGs); virulence factors (VFs)) communities at the entry and exit points of the RWDS. Furthermore, water quality data are investigated to evaluate the potential relationship with these metagenomic annotations. This study found that the organic carbon content was likely relevant to the increase of bacteria and functional genes in RWDS. It was also found that the variation of functional genes was not associated with their host, inferring the role of horizontal gene transfers or promiscuity of hosts for various functional genes. Furthermore, Pseudomonas was identified in one RWDS with significant increase at both bacterial and functional levels. 2019-11-21T07:58:45Z 2019-11-21T07:58:45Z 2019-11 Thesis 10.25781/KAUST-64QRB http://hdl.handle.net/10754/660155 en 2020-11-20 At the time of archiving, the student author of this thesis opted to temporarily restrict access to it. The full text of this thesis will become available to the public after the expiration of the embargo on 2020-11-20.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Metagenomics
Reclaimed Water
Bacterial Community
Functional Genes
spellingShingle Metagenomics
Reclaimed Water
Bacterial Community
Functional Genes
Wang, Changzhi
Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
description Water reuse is increasingly pursued to alleviate global water scarcity. However, wastewater treatment process does not achieve full removal of biological contaminants from wastewater, and hence some microorganisms and their genetic elements can be disseminated into the reclaimed water distribution systems (RWDS). A systematic identification and characterization of these biological contaminants is required. However, a broad characterization for large-scale data are limited. In this study, reclaimed water samples are investigated through metagenomic analyses to assess their bacterial and functional (metal resistance genes (MRGs); virulence factors (VFs)) communities at the entry and exit points of the RWDS. Furthermore, water quality data are investigated to evaluate the potential relationship with these metagenomic annotations. This study found that the organic carbon content was likely relevant to the increase of bacteria and functional genes in RWDS. It was also found that the variation of functional genes was not associated with their host, inferring the role of horizontal gene transfers or promiscuity of hosts for various functional genes. Furthermore, Pseudomonas was identified in one RWDS with significant increase at both bacterial and functional levels.
author2 Hong, Pei-Ying
author_facet Hong, Pei-Ying
Wang, Changzhi
author Wang, Changzhi
author_sort Wang, Changzhi
title Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
title_short Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
title_full Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
title_fullStr Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
title_full_unstemmed Metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
title_sort metagenomic characterization of bacterial and functional gene communities in reclaimed water distribution systems
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10754/660155
work_keys_str_mv AT wangchangzhi metagenomiccharacterizationofbacterialandfunctionalgenecommunitiesinreclaimedwaterdistributionsystems
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