Increased nitrous oxide accumulation by bioelectrochemical denitrification under autotrophic conditions: kinetics and expression of denitrification pathway genes

Van Doan, T; Lee, TK; Shukla, SK; Tiedje, JM; Park, J

HERO ID

2232836

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2013

Language

English

PMID

24210359

HERO ID 2232836
In Press No
Year 2013
Title Increased nitrous oxide accumulation by bioelectrochemical denitrification under autotrophic conditions: kinetics and expression of denitrification pathway genes
Authors Van Doan, T; Lee, TK; Shukla, SK; Tiedje, JM; Park, J
Journal Water Research
Volume 47
Issue 19
Page Numbers 7087-7097
Abstract Under autotrophic conditions, we investigated the effects of different current densities on bioelectrochemical denitrification (BED). In this study, nitrate consumption and nitrous oxide (N2O) production, microbial diversity and population dynamics, and denitrification pathway gene expressions were explored in continuous flow BED reactors at different current densities (0.2, 1, 5, 10 and 20 A/m(2)). We found that, under the autotrophic conditions, N2O accumulation was increased with increase in current density. The maximum rate of denitrification was 1.65 NO3(-)-N (g/NCCm(3).h), and approximately 70% of the reduced N was accumulated as N2O. After each current density was applied, pyrosequencing of the expressed 16S rRNA genes amplified from the cathodic biofilms revealed that that 16 genera were active and in common at all currents, and that eight of those showed a statistically significant correlation with particular current densities. The relative expression of napA and narG was highest, whereas nosZ was low relative to its level in the inoculum suggesting that this could have contributed the high N2O accumulation. Kinetic analysis of nitrate reduction and N2O accumulation followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The Vmax for nitrate consumption and N2O accumulation were similar, however the Km values determined as A/m(2) were not. This study provides better understanding of the community and kinetics of a current-fed, autotrophic, cathodic biofilm for evaluating its potential for scale-up and for N2O recovery.
Doi 10.1016/j.watres.2013.08.041
Pmid 24210359
Wosid WOS:000329274900014
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Bioelectrochemical system; Biocathode denitrification; Microbial fuel cell; Pyrosequencing