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Characterization of Natural and Affected Environments
Biochar modulates methanogenesis through electron syntrophy of microorganisms with ethanol as a substrate Hai-Yan Yuan, Long-Jun Ding, Eric Fru Zama, Pan-pan Liu, Wael N. Hozzein, and Yong-Guan Zhu Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b04121 • Publication Date (Web): 10 Oct 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 14, 2018
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Biochar Modulates Methanogenesis through Electron Syntrophy of Microorganisms
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with Ethanol as a Substrate
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Hai-Yan Yuan†,‡, Long-Jun Ding†, Eric Fru Zama§, Pan-Pan Liu||, Wael N. Hozzein ⊥
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and Yong-Guan Zhu *,†,§
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† State
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Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100085, People’s Republic of China.
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‡ University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, People’s Republic of China.
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§
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Academy of Sciences, Xiamen 361021, People’s Republic of China.
Key Lab of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco-Environmental
Key Lab of Urban Environment and Health, Institute of Urban Environment, Chinese
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|| State
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Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, People’s Republic of China.
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⊥
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University, Riyadh 11451, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control, School of
Bioproducts Research Chair, Zoology Department, College of Science, King Saud
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TOC/Abstract art
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ABSTRACT
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Biochar has the potential to influence methanogenesis which is a key component of global
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carbon cycling. However, the mechanisms governing biochar's influence on
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methanogenesis is not well understood, especially its effects on interspecies relationships
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between methanogens and anaerobic bacteria (e.g. Geobacteraceae). To understand how
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different types of biochar influence methanogenesis, biochars derived from rice straw (RB),
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wood chips (WB) and manure (MB) were added to the methanogenic enrichment culture
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system of a paddy soil. Compared to the non-biochar control (NB), RB and MB additions
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accelerated methanogenesis remarkably, showing 10.7 and 12.3-folds higher methane
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production rate, respectively; while WB had little effect on methanogenesis. Using fourier
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transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and
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electrochemical methods, RB and MB also had higher redox-active properties or charging
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and discharging capacities than WB, and the functional groups, mainly quinones, on the
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biochar surface played an important role in facilitating methanogenesis. Quantitative
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polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) result demonstrated that electronic syntrophy did exist
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between methanogens and Geobacteraceae. RB and MB stimulate methanogenesis by
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facilitating direct interspecies electron transfer between methanogens and Geobacteraceae.
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Our findings contribute to a better understanding of the effects of biochars from different
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feedstocks on methanogenesis and provide new evidence to the mechanisms of stimulating
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methanogenesis via biochar.
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INTRODUCTION ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Methanogenesis is a key component of global carbon cycling and widely distributed
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in both natural environments and engineered systems1-4. Methanogenesis includes
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hydrogenotrophic
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electromethanogenesis. Electromethanogenesis is a novel manner of methane production5,
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6.
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production of methane7. However, high H2 concentration could inhibit syntrophic oxidation
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of organic matters and suppress growth of syntrophic microorganisms, which makes
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interspecies electron transfer be the rate-limiting step of methanogenesis8, 9. But electron
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transfer between different species is not limited to H2 or formate as electron carriers5.
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Different species often engage in direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET)10. DIET could
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transfer electrons more efficiently than H2 or formate as electron carriers11.
methanogenesis,
acetoclastic
methanogenesis
and
H2 or formate, as electron carriers, could facilitate electron exchange, leading to the
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Recent studies have found that some materials with good conductivity such as
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granular activated carbon and magnetite could accelerate DIET11, 12. Biochar, as a carbon-
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rich product of incomplete combustion of biomass with a limited oxygen supply13-15, has
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been found to be redox active. Oxidized biochar could function as electron acceptors to
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enable organic matter degradation and the reduced biochar could serve as electron donors
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for nitrate16, magnetite reduction17 or for bacteria18. It has been suggested that biochar
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serving as an electron shuttle could accelerate DIET between Geobacter metallireducens
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and Methanosarcina in the co-culture system18. During anaerobic digestion process,
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biochar could also facilitate CH4 emissions through facilitating electron transfer processes
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directly by functioning as electron shuttle19. Yet little is known about how biochar
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functioning as an electron shuttle influences microbial methanogenesis in soils. Biochar
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has organic functional groups such as quinone and hydroquinone on its surface, which lead
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to its redox active properties20. However, the knowledge of how the redox properties from
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different types of biochars (i.e., biochars produced from different feedstocks) influence
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methanogenesis is rather limited. Considering that feedstock has been recognized as a
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determinant of properties of biochar21, 22, we thus hypothesize that biochars derived from
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different feedstocks have remarkably different redox properties and exert distinct effects
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on methanogenesis.
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Therefore, in this study, biochars derived from rice straw (RB), manure (MB) and
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wood chips (WB) were employed to investigate their effects on methanogenesis. Biochars
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from rice straw and manure are widely applied to agricultural ecosystems, because they
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can increase crop yield, sequester carbon and immobilize contaminants such as lead and
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atrazine23, 24. Biochar from wood chips is a major component of natural organic matter
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worldwide, due to frequent wildfires25. We aimed at (i) investigating the influence of three
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types of biochars from rice straw, wood chips and manure on methanogens from paddy
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soils via anaerobic incubation, (ii) revealing the underlying mechanisms regulating
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biochars' effects on methanogenesis by qualitative and quantitative analyses of the
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chemical composition of biochars using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and
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fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and quantifying the changes in the
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charging and discharging capacities of biochars using electrochemical analyses, and (iii)
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exploring the electronic syntrophy between Geobacteraceae and methanogens via
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incubation with or without biochar.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Characterization of Biochars
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Three types of biochars (RB, WB and MB) were made from rice straw, poplar wood
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chips and cow manure biomasses, separately. Each type of biomass was pyrolyzed at 600ºC
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for 2 h in a closed container under oxygen-limited conditions. Then biochars were grinded
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to small particle sizes and passed through 2 mm sieve. A pH meter was used to measure
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the pH of biochar at 1:15 biochar:water ratio (w/v). Brunauer-Emmett-Teller (BET) surface
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area of RB, WB and MB was determined with an ASAP 2020 HD88 instrument
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(Micromeritics, USA). Electrical conductivity (EC) of the three biochars was measured
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with a conductivity meter26. The total C and H of the biochars were determined with an
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elemental analyzer (Vario EL III, Elementar, Germany). Before application, RB, WB and
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MB were washed in order to remove dissolved organic matter. The washed biochars were
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made by leaching pyrolized biochars with deionized water, and then dried in the oven.
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Qualitative and quantitative information of the chemical composition of biochars was
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obtained with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) (ESCALAB 250 Xi- ThermoFisher,
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UK). Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) (Thermo Scientific Nicolet 8700)
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was used to determine organic functional groups such as hydroxyls and carbonyls on the
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surface of biochars. Biochar was prepared in pellets of fused KBr within the 4000-400 cm-1
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regions27. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (Hitachi S4800+EDS, Hitachi Limited,
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Japan), operated at 20 kV with an energy X-ray dispersive (EDX) detector was used to
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observe the microstructure and element distribution of biochars.
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Three biochar powder were immobilized on graphite rod electrodes for
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electrochemical tests of surface quinone groups. 8 mg biochar solids and 40 μL of nafion
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were dispersed in 1 mL of a mixture of ethanol and water (1:4) with a vortex. Then, 15 μL
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of the resulting dispersion was dropped onto the surface of the working electrodes and
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dried at room temperature. Afterwards, cyclic voltammetry was performed in a three-
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electrode configured cell with a potentiostat (CHI1040B, Chenhua, China). Graphite rods
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and Ag/AgCl were used as counter and reference electrodes, respectively. 0.1 M KCl was
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used as the supporting electrolyte. Before measurements, N2 was used to purge the oxygen
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from solution. Reduction and oxidation currents were designed to a negative and positive
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value, respectively. The scan direction for the cyclic voltammogram was changed from
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reduction to oxidation and the scan rate was 50 mV s-1.
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Enrichment Cultures of Methanogenic Microbial Communities
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Methanogenic microbial communities were enriched in serum bottles (125 ml) filled with
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50 ml of anaerobic medium. Ethanol is one of the most abundant low molecular metabolite
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during organic matter degradation28. Consequently, 30 mM of ethanol was supplemented
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in serum bottles as organic carbon substrate. The anaerobic medium was comprised of
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NaHCO3 (5 mM L-1), MgCl2 (0.5 mM L-1), CaCl2 (0.5 mM L-1), KH2PO4 (1 mM L-1),
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NH4Cl (10 mM L-1), 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (Hepes), 0.05%
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Bacto yeast extract, 1 ml L-1 trace element solution and 1 ml L-1 Se/W solution29. 100 mg
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(wet weight) of paddy soil was inoculated as a source of microorganisms. The paddy soil
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was sampled at Hailun (47o35'N, 126o53'E), Heilongjiang Province, China in October 2014.
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The soil was air-dried and sieved (2mm mesh size), then stored at 4oC before use. The
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physicochemical properties of the inoculated paddy soils are shown in Table S1. In order
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to test the effect of biochar amendments, 1 g of RB, WB, or MB was added to the
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enrichment culture medium. Control cultures (NB) were not amended with biochars.
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Moreover, in order to investigate the electronic syntrophy between Geobacteraceae and
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methanogens in the enrichment culture systems, a methanogenesis inhibitor (2-
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bromoethane sulfonate (BES)) was added to the enrichment culture systems. Meanwhile,
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control enrichment culture systems were not amended with BES (Non-BES). Consequently,
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the crossed design resulted in eight treatments: (1) control with no additions, (2) control
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with BES, (3) with addition of RB, (4) with addition of RB and BES, (5) with addition of
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WB, (6) with addition of WB and BES, (7) with addition of MB and (8) with addition of
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MB and BES. The treatments of the experiment were shown in Fig. S1. Each treatment has
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three replicates.
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BES could inhibit the growth of methanogens, but could not inhibit the growth of
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Geobacteraceae directly30. If electronic syntrophy exists between Geobacteraceae and
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methanogens, the growth of Geobacteraceae would also be suppressed when that of
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methanogens was inhibited by BES. Conversely, the growth of Geobacteraceae would not
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be influenced in the enrichment culture systems without BES. Consequently, different
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treatments with or without BES were carried out to demonstrate the electronic syntrophy
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between Geobacteraceae and methanogens.
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The headspace of all the cultures were flushed with N2/CO2 [80:20 (v/v)] and then
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incubated at 30°C without shaking. Methane concentrations in the enrichment cultures
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were measured with gas chromatography (Agilent Technologies, CA, USA).
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Analyses of Archaeal and Bacterial Community from the Enrichment Cultures Using
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Illumina MiSeq Sequencing
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After 42 days, all the enrichment samples were collected by centrifugation. Microbial
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DNA from each enrichment culture system was extracted with FAST DNA Spin Kit (MP
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Biomedicals) as described previously31. NanoDrop spectrophotometer (ND-1000, USA)
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was used to quantify DNA of the extracts. The V3-V4 region of the bacterial 16S rRNA
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gene was amplified by Polymerase Chain reaction (PCR) using a primer set: 338f (5'-
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ACTCCTACGGGAGGCAGCAG-3') and 806r (5'- GGACTACHVGGGTWTCTAAT-3')
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which contained 8-bp barcodes for sample identification. The V4-V5 region of the archaeal
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16S rRNA gene was amplified via PCR with a primer set of 524f (5'-
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TGYCAGCCGCCGCGGTAA-3') and 958r (5'-YCCGGCGTTGAVTCCAATT-3') which
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also contained 8-bp barcodes for sample identification. The details about PCR reaction
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mixture and thermal programs for 16S rRNA genes of bacteria and archaea are shown on
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Table S2. The obtained amplicons from the PCR reactions were pooled in equimolar and
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paired-end sequenced (2 × 250) on an Illumina MiSeq platform according to the standard
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protocols of the Majorbio Bioinformatics Institute (Shanghai, China).
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Raw sequencing data were demultiplexed and quality-filtered using Quantitative
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Insights Into Microbial Ecology (QIIME) (version 1.17)32. Briefly, low-quality reads
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which contained primer mismatches and incorrect barcodes were removed, and ambiguous
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reads were also removed. Then, the primers and barcodes were trimmed off. The raw pair-
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end reads were assembled to generate clean joined reads. The clean joined reads were
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clustered into operational taxonomic units (OTUs) at a 97% similarity level. The
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representative read which was the most abundant sequence within each OTU was classified
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with the ribosome database project (RDP) classifier (http://rdp.cme.msu.edu/) using
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confidence threshold of 80%33.
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Quantitative PCR of 16S rRNA Genes of Geobacteraceae and McrA
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Quantification of 16S rRNA genes of Geobacteraceae was performed by quantitative
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PCR (qPCR) with the primer set Geo494F/Geo825R34. Methyl coenzyme M reductase
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(mcrA) gene was also analyzed by qPCR with the primer set ME1/ME235. Tables S3-S4
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show the details of qPCR primers, reaction mixtures and thermal programs. Standard
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plasmids which carried the corresponding genes were obtained through cloning the genes
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from samples. For a standard curve, a 10-fold serial dilution of the standard plasmid DNA
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was used and it covered seven orders of magnitude from 102 to 108 copies of template per
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test. Fig. S2 shows the Standard curves for qPCR. qPCR was performed in triplicate and
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the final Geobacteraceae bacterial 16S rRNA and mcrA genes were obtained by calibrating
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against total DNA concentrations extracted and the volume of anaerobic medium.
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Statistical Analysis
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QIIME (http://qiime.sourceforge.net/), R (http://www.r-project.org/), and Origin 8.5
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(OriginPro 8.5.lnk) were used to conduct the statistical analyses. Additionally, SPSS (SPSS
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statistics 17.0) software was employed to carry out one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA).
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Linear regression analysis was carried out to demonstrate the syntrophy between
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Geobacteraceae and methanogens. In order to compare with the effects of three different
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biochars on methanogenesis, the suppression ratio of the Geobacteraceae growth in the
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enrichment cultures with BES was calculated. Analysis of similarity (ANOSIM) was
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conducted to determine significance among groups (i.e. biochar type) with R package
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"vegan". To find the important factors which correlated with archaeal and bacterial
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community, redundancy analysis (RDA) was carried out using envfit function of R package
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"vegan".
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Accession Number of Nucleotide Sequences
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The MiSeq sequencing data of this study has been deposited in National Center for
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Biotechnology Information (NCBI) Sequence Read Achives (SRA) database under
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bioproject number (PRJNA393217) and accession number (SRP111434).
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Results
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Methane Production during Enrichment of Methanogenic Communities
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The initial rate and long-term extent of methane production were both enhanced with
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the addition of RB and MB. The addition of MB stimulated methanogenesis to a greater
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extent compared with RB addition (Fig. 1a and b). However, the rate and extent of
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methanogenesis was lower in presence of WB. More specifically, in the presence of MB
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there was 34.64 ± 3.04 (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3) mM cumulative methane
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produced at day 42 (Fig. 1a). Theoretically, there will be 30 mM cumulative methane
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produced when the acetate from the conversion of ethanol (30 mM added) was completely
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utilized (equations (1) and (2)). This suggested that the electrons produced from the process
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of the conversion of ethanol to acetate were utilized to produce methane according to the
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equations (3), (4) and (5)36. In case of RB, there was 14.58 ± 9.12 (mean ± standard
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deviation, n = 3) mM cumulative methane produced at day 42, which was lower than that
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of MB. For WB and NB treatments, 0.08 ± 0.06 (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3) and
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1.08 ± 1.30 (mean ± standard deviation, n = 3) mM cumulative methane was produced at
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day 42, respectively, which were significantly lower than that of MB and RB (P < 0.05).
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Moreover, the enrichment culture with the addition of RB and MB showed 10.7 and 12.3-
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folds higher methane production rate compared with the NB treatment, while in the
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presence of WB methanogenesis remained unchanged (Fig. 1b).
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2CH3CH2OH + 2H2O→ 2CH3COOH + 8H + + 8e -
(1)
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2CH3COOH → 2CH4 + 2CO2
(2)
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CO2 + 8e ― + 8H + → CH4 + 2H2O
(3)
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2CH3CH2OH → 3CH4 + CO2
(4)
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CH3CH2OH + H2O→CH3COOH + 4H + + 4𝑒 ―
(5)
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The Physicochemical, Morphological and Electrochemical Properties of Biochars
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Biochar varied considerably in physicochemical properties including pH, BET surface
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area, EC, C (%) and H (%) depending on the feedstock (Fig. S3 and Table 1). Biochar
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morphological properties varied considerably across three types of precursor materials.
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SEM images showed RB with a rough, elongated appearance and visible porosity (Fig. 2a).
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WB had a smooth appearance with porous structure, while MB contained rough, irregular
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structure with visible porosity (Fig. 2b and c). EDX analysis provided information on the
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localized elemental contents (Fig. S3). C and O were the dominant elements present in all
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biochars (75.5-89.2% and 1.53-16.7%, respectively). It was noticed that the amount of O
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in WB (1.53%) was lower than that in RB (10.51%) and MB (16.68%) (Fig. S3). Different
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biomass materials have various contents of lignocelluloses, which can be degraded
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differently in response to pyrolysis temperature37. Compared with rice straw and manure,
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wood chip contains more lignocelluloses, which might be condensed into graphite sheets
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with more aromatic carbon than oxygen during pyrolysis.
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Different biomass feedstocks caused remarkable differences in the chemical structure
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of biochars such as organic functional groups (Fig. 3a and Fig. 4). Reversible charging and
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discharging current peaks demonstrated that functional groups on the surface of biochars
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can act as both electron acceptors and donators (Fig. 3b). RB and MB produced larger
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current (12.0 mA and 11.5 mA) compared with WB (3.3 mA) and the control (0.3 mA),
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which indicated that the capacitance behavior of biochar might be a significant reason for
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increasing the interspecies electron transfer. FTIR analysis indicated broad peaks between
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1500 and 1000 cm-1 which corresponded to C=O or C=C and C-O bonds. These bonds
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stretched in quinones and hydroquinones across three types of biochars38 and these bonds
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were prominent on MB based on the intensity of the peak (Fig. 3a). FTIR and
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electrochemical results were supported by XPS analysis which could determine the
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bonding energies of carbon on the biochar surface. The wide scan XPS spectra (Fig. 4a, c
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and e) showed that the O/C atomic ratios of RB, WB and MB are 0.27, 0.11 and 0.91,
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respectively, indicating that WB is more reduced than RB and MB. The C1s XPS spectra
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results exhibited the same oxygen functional groups across all the biochars. The peaks in
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RB with binding energies at about 284.4, 286.2 and 293.6 eV, are attributed to the C-
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C/C=C, C=O and O-C=O groups, respectively27 (Fig. 4b). Additionally, the peaks in WB
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with binding energies at about 284.4, 285.5 and 289.8 eV, are attributed to the C-C/C=C,
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C=O and O-C=O groups, respectively27 (Fig. 4d). The peaks in MB with binding energies
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at about 284.4, 285.8 and 293.3 eV, are also attributed to the C-C/C=C, C=O and O-C=O
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groups, respectively27 (Fig. 4f). The comparison of the three spectra shows that the
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intensities of the peaks associated with oxygen groups in WB are slightly weaker than in
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the other two types of biochars (i.e. RB and MB) indicating that the oxygen functional
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groups of WB distributed in the inner sheet were difficult to reduce39.
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Quantification of Geobacteraceae and McrA in the Enrichment Cultures
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In this study, to address the electronic syntrophy between methanogens and
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Geobacteraceae in the enrichment cultures, qPCR was used to quantify Geobacteraceae
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populations in the presence and absence of a methanogenesis inhibitor, BES. We have
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found that the number of 16S rRNA genes copies of Geobacteraceae was reduced in the
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treatments of RB and MB with BES compared with those without BES (Fig. 5a and b).
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Additionally, linear regression analysis between the abundance of mcrA and
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Geobacteraceae with or without BES showed that the abundance of mcrA was positively
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correlated with the abundance of Geobacteraceae (P < 0.001, R2 = 0.689) (Fig. 5c). These
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indicated that electronic syntrophy did exist between Geobacteraceae and methanogens in
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the RB and MB treatments and BES could indirectly suppress the growth of
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Geobacteraceae via directly inhibiting the growth of methanogens due to DIET. While in
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the treatment of WB and NB with BES, though BES inhibited the growth of methanogens,
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it did not influence the number of 16S rRNA genes copies of Geobacteraceae compared
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with those without BES (Fig. 5a and b). Therefore, electronic syntrophy did not exist in the
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WB and NB treatments.
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Effects of Biochars on Bacterial and Archaeal Community Composition
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Illumina-based 16S rRNA metagenomic profiling was used to investigate the
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influences of biochar amendment on bacterial and archaeal community composition. After
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processing and quality filtering, 18346 and 28168 high-quality sequences were obtained in
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each sample for bacteria and archaea, respectively. ANOSIM results indicated that there
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were remarkable differences in the bacterial (P < 0.01) and archaeal (P < 0.01) community
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composition among the treatments.
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For bacteria, at phylum level, compared with the NB, the major bacterial communities
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were Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Chlorobi and Bacteroidetes, which were enriched in
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all the biochar supplemented enrichment culture (Fig. S5). RB and MB amendments
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increased the relative abundance of Proteobacteria to 10.09% and 0.71%, respectively,
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compared to 0.15% in the NB treatment. For MB, the relative abundances of Chlorobi and
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Bacteroidetes were 1.70% and 0.88%, respectively, while they were not detected in NB.
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The relative abundance of Actinobacteria increased from 0.02% for NB to 0.86% for MB
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(Fig. S5). In RB treatment, the relative abundances of Bacteroidetes and Chlorobi were
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4.91% and 1.67%, respectively, while they were not detected in NB (Fig. S5). Meanwhile,
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RB amendment increased the relative abundance of Actinobacteria from 0.02% in NB to
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1.49% (Fig. S5). Five phyla, including Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Chlorobi,
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Bacterioidetes and Firmicutes were also detected in WB treatment. At genus level, in the
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case of MB, Clostridium genus within Firmicute phylum was significantly enriched (Fig.
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7a) (P < 0.05), while its relative abundances were significantly decreased from 17.14% in
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NB to 7.04% and 15.53% in RB and WB treatments (P < 0.05; P < 0.05), suggesting that
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MB provided a favorable environment for the growth of Clostridum, compared with the
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RB and WB40. Previous studies have shown that Clostridium was capable of
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electrosynthesis41 and it was able to reduce insoluble Fe(III)42. This suggested that
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Clostridium could donate electrons to the biochar which might be utilized by methanogenes.
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In addition to Clostridium, the relative abundance of Thermincola was increased from 0.01%
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for NB to 9.31, 23.26 and 0.36% for RB, WB and MB amendments, respectively. Previous
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studies have showed that Thermincola could transfer electrons to the anode of microbial
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fuel cells43. However, whether Thermincola contribute to DIET warrants further
307
investigation. Geobacter are considered to be extracellular respiring bacteria and are
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widely distributed in paddy soils44, 45. For RB, the relative abundance of Geobacter was
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0.13%, while it was not detected in NB.
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The major archaeal communities were Methanobacterium and Methanosarcina at
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genus level, which had been detected as major methanogenic archaea in paddy soils46 and
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anaerobic digesters47 (Fig. 7b and S6). Methanobacterium, the major genus within
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Euryarchaeota phylum, was enriched in the MB treatment. The relative abundance of
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Methanobacterium increased from 49.89 for NB to 71.08% in the MB supplemented
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enrichment cultures. While RB amendments increased the abundance of Methanosarcina,
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the major genus within Euryarchaeota phylum, from 2.06% for NB to 95.86% in the RB
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supplemented enrichment cultures.
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Based on envfit function, O/C ratio of biochar, maximum rate of methane production
319
and capacitive current of biochar were identified as variables which significantly shaped
320
bacterial and archaeal community in the enrichment culture systems. These three factors
321
explained 93.6% and 86.1% of the variance of bacterial and archaeal community,
322
respectively (Fig. 6a and b).
323
Discussion
324
Previous study reported that Geobacter metallireducens could proceed DIET48. More
325
specifically, electrons released from ethanol could be directly transferred from Geobacter
326
metallireducens to the methanogens such as Methanosarcina barkerior36. Biochar could
327
accelerate DIET between Geobacter metallireducens and Geobacter sulfurreducens or
328
Methanosarcina barkeri18. Moreover, biochar could function as electron shuttle between
329
Fe(III) minerals and bacteria, which influenced soil biogeochemistry17. In this study, linear
330
regression analysis suggested that Geobacteraceae and methanogens (here represented by
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mcrA) from paddy soils established syntrophic relationship. This result, together with the
332
remarkable inhibition of the growth of Geobacteraceae in the enrichment cultures with
333
BES in the RB and MB treatments, suggested that RB and MB facilitated electronic
334
syntrophy between Geobacteraceae and methanogens. Otherwise, WB did not influence
335
the electronic syntrophy between Geobacteraceae and methanogens. It is generally known
336
that material's conductivity had an effect on the DIET process existing in natural
337
environments49, 50. However, in this study, conductivity of biochars did not promote DIET.
338
As shown in Table 1, there was no significant difference between the conductivity of WB
339
and that of MB, while the maximum methane production rate of MB exhibited 211 times
340
higher than that of WB, which indicated that conductivity of biochars did not play a key
341
role in the facilitating methanogenesis. Likewise, there was no remarkable difference
342
between the BET surface area of WB and that of MB, indicating that BET surface area of
343
the biochars is not the key factor for promoting the methanogenesis. Biochar is a complex
344
material and besides conductivity51, other properties such as redox properties may play
345
important roles in the facilitating methanogenesis in the enrichment culture systems.
346
Previous studies reported that humic substances and activated carbon had the capacity
347
of accepting and donating electrons52, 53. Biochar has quinone and hydroquinone moieties
348
which make biochar redox active (i.e., be capable of donating and accepting electrons)17,
349
54.
350
with WB. These moieties may participate in the DIET. The charging and discharging cycles
351
of the functional groups (e.g., quinone and hydroquinone pairs) on biochar surface have
RB and MB have higher content of the quinone and hydroquinone moieties compared
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been shown to accept and donate electrons reversibly55, and played an important role in the
353
electron transfer process56. Sun et al. demonstrated that biochar with O/C ratio > 0.09 could
354
be more likely to transfer electrons through charging and discharging cycles of the
355
functional groups on the biochar surface rather than through direct electron transfer by
356
conductivity51, 56. In our study, the O/C ratio of RB and MB were much higher than 0.09
357
(Fig. 4a, c and e), which indicated that the charging and discharging cycles of the functional
358
groups on the biochar surface played an important role in the electron transfer process.
359
A recent study has shown that Methanobacterium could not accept electrons from
360
syntrophic bacterium directly, and only accept electrons from syntrophic microbes via
361
formate which could serve as electron donor36. However, our study suggested that
362
Methanobacterium could engage in microbial electron uptake from MB directly. We then
363
deduced that Methanobacterium could accept electrons from syntrophic bacterium such as
364
Geobacteraceae directly. Meanwhile MB could facilitate the electron exchange between
365
those two kinds of microbes.
366
Methanosarcina has been reported to display high respiratory versatility and could
367
utilize various substrates for methanogenesis, including H2, CO2, ethanol, and acetate30.
368
Under syntrophic methanogenic conditions, where H2 partial pressures are low,
369
Methanosarcina mainly use acetate as a methanogenic substrate rather than H2 or CO2.
370
Methanosarcina were syntrophic partners of Geobacteraceae57 which has been reported to
371
exchange electrons with Methanosarcina and biochar could increase the direct transfer of
372
electrons between Geobacteraceae and Methanosarcina18. In addition, interspecies
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electron transfer in co-culture of Methanosarcina and Geobacteraceae with ethanol as
374
electron donor was in accordance with our observation that Methanosarcina could utilize
375
the electrons from the conversion of ethanol to acetate (equation (3)).Consequently,
376
biochar facilitated methanogenesis by increasing the direct electron transfer between
377
Methanosarcina and Geobacteraceae from paddy soils, which challenges the present
378
understanding that biochar might decrease methane gas emission58. Considering that
379
biochar is widely distributed in various environments such as paddy soils, river sediments
380
and anaerobic digesters, the influence of different types of biochars on the global carbon
381
cycling should be further investigated.
382
Overall, this study indicated that the effect of biochar on methanogenesis is highly
383
dependent on its redox-active properties or charging and discharging capacities. Biochar
384
derived from rice straw and manure, which had higher redox-active nature than biochar
385
from wood chips, might facilitate the electronic syntrophy between Geobacteraceae and
386
methanogenes with ethanol as substrate and thus increased methane production. This study
387
highlights the influences of biochar from different feedstocks on methanogenesis and
388
corresponding effects on greenhouse gas (e.g., methane) emission. Compared with
389
biochars from wood chips, biochar from rice straw and manure increased methane
390
production. So the application of biochar from manure and rice straw appears to be a good
391
strategy to promote the methane production rates in anaerobic digestions. Additionally,
392
compared with biochars from rice straw and manure, biochar from wood chips had little
393
effect on methane production. We therefore recommend applying biochar from wood chips
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in paddy soils for sustainable nutrient management. Our results contribute to a better
395
understanding of the effects of biochars from different feedstocks on methanogenesis and
396
provide new evidence to the mechanisms of facilitating methanogenesis by biochar.
397
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
398
Supporting Information
399
This information is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org/.
400
Table captions
401
Table S1 The physicochemical properties of inoculated paddy soil from Hailun, China
402
Table S2 PCR reaction mixture and thermal profiles for 16S rRNA genes of bacteria and
403
archaea
404
Table S3 Primers used for quantitative PCR
405
Table S4 Quantitative PCR reaction mixture and thermal profiles for 16S rRNA genes of
406
Geobacteraceae and mcrA
407 408
Figure captions
409
Figure S1 The treatments of the experiment design.
410
Figure S2 The standard curves of PCR (a-16S rRNA genes of Geobacteraceae, b-mcrA)
411
Figure S3 Cluster and Non-metric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) analysis based on the
412
physicochemical properties of the three kinds of biochars (A-Cluster analysis; B-NMDS
413
analysis).
414
Figure S4 Scanning electron microscopy images with the energy dispersive X-ray analysis
415
of the three kinds of biochars (a-RB, b-WB, c-MB).
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Figure S5 Bacterial communities at phylum level in the enrichment cultures with ethanol
417
as substrate and with or without amendments of biochar.
418
Figure S6 Archaeal communities at phylum level in the enrichment cultures with ethanol
419
as substrate and with or without amendments of biochar.
420 421
AUTHOR INFORMATION
422
Corresponding Author*Address
423
State Key Lab of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco-Environmental
424
Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100085, China. Phone: +86-10-62-
425
62936940; fax: +86-10-62936940; e-mail:
[email protected] 426
Notes
427
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
428
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
429
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant Nos.
430
41430858 and 41601242, and the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese
431
Academy of Sciences (XDB15020402). The authors would like to thank Twasol Research
432
Excellence Program (TRE Program) at King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia for
433
support.
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DOI:10.1038/ncomms1053.
to
mitigate
global
climate
change.
Nature
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commun
2010,
1:56,
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Table 1 Physical and Chemical Properties of Biochars Original
Pyrolysis temperature
Particle size
feedstock
(ºC)
(mm)
RB
rice straw
600 for 2h
≤2
10.40±0.02a
38.8±0.99a
28.53±0.86a 56.42±0.09b 2.10±0.02b
WB
wood chips
600 for 2h
≤2
9.60±0.03c
14.75±0.95b
2.25±0.06b
83.31±0.15a 2.89±0.03a
MB
manure
600 for 2h
≤2
10.24±0.06b
16.91±0.73b
2.77±0.07b
17.09±0.62c 0.30±0.00c
Biochar
616 617
Page 32 of 41
pH
Different superscript letters indicate significant differences ( P< 0.05). Mean ± SD
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BET surface area
EC
(m2/g)
(µS/cm)
C (%)
H (%)
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Figure captions
619
Figure 1. Effects of biochar on methanogenic activities of paddy soil microbial
620
communities. (a) time-courses of methane concentrations in the enrichment cultures with
621
ethanol as a substrate in the absence or presence of biochar; (b) the maximum
622
methanogenic rates estimated from curves in (a). Methane concentrations are expressed
623
as mM by assuming that methane was present in the aqueous phase. Different letters
624
above the bar represent a significant (P < 0.05) difference in the maximum methanogenic
625
rates among different treatments. Data are presented as the means of three independent
626
experiments, and error bars represent standard deviations
627
Figure 2. Scanning electron microscopy images of the three used biochars. (a) (Rice
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Straw Biochar) RB, (b) (Wood Chips Biochar) WB, (c) (Manure Biochar) MB
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Figure 3. (a) Stacked fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) spectra of (Rice Straw
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Biochar) RB, (Wood Chips Biochar) WB and (Manure Biochar) MB; (b) charging and
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discharging cycles. Cyclic voltammograms of immobilized surface functional groups at a
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graphite working electrode. Scan rate = 50 mV s-1
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Figure 4. X-ray photoelectron microscopy (XPS) analysis. (a) XPS spectra of (Rice Straw
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Biochar) RB; (b) C1s spectrum of RB; (c) XPS spectra of (Wood Chips Biochar) WB; (d)
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C1s spectrum of WB; (e) XPS spectra of (Manure Biochar) MB; (f) C1s spectrum of MB
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Figure 5. (a) Copy numbers of 16S rRNA genes of Geobacteraceae in enrichment
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cultures with ethanol as substrate. Error bars indicate the standard deviation of three
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replicates; (b) Suppression ratio of the growth of Geobacteraceae in the enrichment
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cultures with BES compared without BES; (c) Relationship between gene copies of mcrA
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per mL cells and 16S rRNA gene copies of Geobacteraceae per mL cells
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Figure 6. Redundancy analysis (RDA) compares microbial community composition from
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enrichment culture systems with different types of biochars and variables, including O/C,
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maximum rate of methane production (Max. rate) and capacitive current. (a) bacteria; (b)
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archaea.
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Figure 7. Relative abundances of the 10 and 6 most abundant taxa at genus level based on
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16S rRNA gene sequence data in the enrichment cultures with or without amendments of
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biochar; (a) bacteria; (b) archaea. The relative abundance is expressed as the percentage of
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the targeted sequences to the total high-quality sequences of each sample.
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