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Deciphering the Inhibition of Ethane on Anaerobic Ammonium Oxidation.

Xin TanWen-Bo NieGuo-Jun XieCheng-Cheng DangXiao-Wei WangDe-Feng XingBing-Feng LiuJie DingNanqi Ren
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) and nitrification, two common biological ammonium oxidation pathways, are critical for the microbial nitrogen cycle. Short chain alkanes (C 2 -C 8 ) have been well-known as inhibitors for nitrification through interaction with the ammonia monooxygenase, while whether these alkanes affect anammox is an open question. Here, this work demonstrated significant inhibition of ethane on anammox and revealed the inhibitory mechanism. The acute inhibition of ethane on anammox was concentration-dependent and reversible; 0.86 mM dissolved ethane caused 50% inhibition (IC 50 ), and 1.72 mM ethane almost completely inhibited anammox. After long-term exposure to 0.09 mM ethane for 30 days, the ammonium (nitrite) removal rate dropped from 202 (267) mg N L -1 d -1 to 1 (1) mg N L -1 d -1 , and the abundance of anammox bacteria decreased from 61.9% to 9.5%. The intercellular ammonium concentration of anammox bacteria decreased after ethane exposure, while metatranscriptome analysis showed significant upregulation of genes for ammonium transport of anammox bacteria. Thus, ethane could suppress ammonium uptake resulting in the inhibition of anammox activities. As ethane is the second most prevalent alkane after methane in various anoxic environments, ethane may have an important effect on the nitrogen cycle driven by anammox that should be investigated in future research.
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