Novel Alcaligenes ammonioxydans sp. nov. from wastewater treatment sludge oxidizes ammonia to N2 with a previously unknown pathway.
Meng-Ru WuTing-Ting HouYing LiuLi-Li MiaoGuo-Min AiLan MaHai-Zhen ZhuYa-Xin ZhuXi-Yan GaoCraig W HerboldMichael WagnerDe-Feng LiZhi-Pei LiuShuang-Jiang LiuPublished in: Environmental microbiology (2021)
Heterotrophic nitrifiers are able to oxidize and remove ammonia from nitrogen-rich wastewaters but the genetic elements of heterotrophic ammonia oxidation are poorly understood. Here, we isolated and identified a novel heterotrophic nitrifier, Alcaligenes ammonioxydans sp. nov. strain HO-1, oxidizing ammonia to hydroxylamine and ending in the production of N2 gas. Genome analysis revealed that strain HO-1 encoded a complete denitrification pathway but lacks any genes coding for homologous to known ammonia monooxygenases or hydroxylamine oxidoreductases. Our results demonstrated strain HO-1 denitrified nitrite (not nitrate) to N2 and N2 O at anaerobic and aerobic conditions respectively. Further experiments demonstrated that inhibition of aerobic denitrification did not stop ammonia oxidation and N2 production. A gene cluster (dnfT1RT2ABCD) was cloned from strain HO-1 and enabled E. coli accumulated hydroxylamine. Sub-cloning showed that genetic cluster dnfAB or dnfABC already enabled E. coli cells to produce hydroxylamine and further to 15 N2 from (15 NH4 )2 SO4 . Transcriptome analysis revealed these three genes dnfA, dnfB and dnfC were significantly upregulated in response to ammonia stimulation. Taken together, we concluded that strain HO-1 has a novel dnf genetic cluster for ammonia oxidation and this dnf genetic cluster encoded a previously unknown pathway of direct ammonia oxidation (Dirammox) to N2 .
Keyphrases
- wastewater treatment
- anaerobic digestion
- room temperature
- genome wide
- microbial community
- antibiotic resistance genes
- escherichia coli
- copy number
- hydrogen peroxide
- sewage sludge
- dna methylation
- nitric oxide
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- single cell
- dna repair
- high intensity
- drinking water
- oxidative stress
- genome wide identification
- municipal solid waste
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor