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Photosynthetic Feast/ Famine Conditions Environmental Science & Technology is published
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Dark/Feast Light/Famine PageEnvironmental 1 of 43 Science & Technology
Ac P N2
PAO CO2
NH4
NOx- Nitrifiers O2
P
PAO CO2
N2
NH4
NOx- Nitrifiers O2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Algae
Algae
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Community Assembly and Ecology of Activated Sludge Under Photosynthetic
2
Feast/Famine Conditions
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Ben O. Oyserman1*, Joseph M. Martirano1, Spenser Wipperfurth1, Brian R. Owen1, Daniel R.
5
Noguera1, Katherine D. McMahon1,2
6 7
1
8
Madison, WI, 53706, USA; 2Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin at Madison,
9
Madison, WI, 53706, USA;
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Wisconsin at Madison,
10 11
Keyword: Algae, Photosynthesis, Polyphosphate, Phosphorus Cycling, Wastewater Treatment,
12
Low Dissolved Oxygen; Symbiosis, Cyanobacteria,
13 14
Running Title – Light-driven polyphosphate cycling
15 16
* corresponding author
17 18
Address: 3207D Engineering Hall, 1415 Engineering Drive, Madison, WI 53706
19
Tel: (734)-272-1249
20
Fax: (608) 262-5199
21 22
Email:
[email protected] 23
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Abstract
25
Here we demonstrate that photosynthetic oxygen production under light/dark, feast/famine
26
cycles with no mechanical aeration and negligible oxygen diffusion is able to maintain
27
phosphorus cycling activity associated with the enrichment of polyphosphate accumulating
28
organisms (PAOs). We investigate the ecology of this novel system by conducting a time series
29
analysis of prokaryotic and eukaryotic biodiversity using the V3-V4 and V4 region of the 16S
30
and 18S rRNA gene sequences, respectively. In the Eukaryotic community, the initial dominant
31
alga observed was Desmodesmus. During operation, the algal community became a more diverse
32
consortium of Desmodesmus, Parachlorella, Characiopodium and Bacillariophytina. In the
33
Prokaryotic community, there was an initial enrichment of the PAO Candidatus Accumulibacter
34
phosphatis (Accumulibacter) Acc-SG2, and the dominant ammonia-oxidizing organism was
35
Nitrosomonas oligotropha, however these populations decreased in relative abundance,
36
becoming dominated by Accumulibacter Acc-SG3 and Nitrosomonas ureae. Furthermore,
37
functional guilds that were not abundant initially became enriched including the putative
38
Cyanobacterial PAOs Obscuribacterales and Leptolyngbya, and the H2-oxidizing denitrifying
39
autotroph Sulfuritalea. After a month of operation, the most abundant prokaryote belonged to an
40
uncharacterized clade of Chlorobi classified as Chlorobiales;SJA-28 Clade III, the first reported
41
enrichment of this lineage. This experiment represents the first investigation into the ecological
42
interactions and community assembly during photosynthetic feast/famine conditions. Our
43
findings suggest that photosynthesis may provide sufficient oxygen to drive polyphosphate
44
cycling.
45
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Keywords: photosynthesis, phosphorus cycling, community assembly, low dissolved oxygen,
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Chlorobiales
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Introduction
49
The success of microbial consortia based biotechnologies is dependent on an understanding of
50
the ecological processes that select for a particular ecosystem function. Once the selective
51
pressures that promote the deterministic assembly of a community with a targeted function have
52
been identified, operational parameters may be optimized to promote these functions, thereby
53
providing stable and economical biotechnologies such as wastewater treatment. Consequently,
54
novel operational parameters hypothesized to promote particular functions may also be assessed
55
and the resulting communities analyzed to identify organisms and interactions that may be
56
selected for or against. With this conceptual framework in mind, a novel operational
57
configuration was analyzed to determine how the oxygen provided by photosynthetic
58
communities might influence the microbial community in a bioreactor subjected to feast and
59
famine cycles analogous to those used in combination with mechanical aeration to encourage
60
polyphosphate (polyP) cycling.
61
Interest in energy efficient and carbon neutral wastewater treatment processes has been
62
stimulated by an increasing awareness that wastewater is a resource from which water, nutrients
63
and energy may be recovered1. Current biological nutrient removal (BNR) technology is often
64
energy intensive in part due to operational requirements such as mechanical aeration. A common
65
method to decrease these energy requirements is by operating treatment systems with minimal
66
aeration2–5, facilitating conditions favorable for simultaneous nitrification, denitrification and
67
phosphorus removal in the absence of differentially aerated zones6. In addition to practices that
68
minimize oxygen requirements, economical alternatives to mechanical aeration such as
69
photosynthetic oxygenation have long been recognized7. Photosynthetic processes are commonly
70
implemented in low tech systems such as high rate algal ponds (HRAP)8, however they are rarely
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integrated into the predominantly heterotrophic activated sludge-type BNR systems9,10.
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Integrating photosynthesis and activated sludge processes is an alluring aspiration because
73
oxygen provided from photosynthesis may be sufficient to fulfill treatment requirements11 and
74
photoautotrophic growth has the potential to contribute to carbon neutral wastewater treatment
75
processes12.
76
In photosynthetic wastewater treatment systems, algae and bacteria may form a reciprocal
77
association in which carbon dioxide (CO2) and oxygen (O2) are exchanged. Theoretical
78
calculations for this symbiotic interaction in a closed system have suggested that the CO2 and O2
79
production are sufficient to drive each process respectively, but that nitrogen (N) and phosphorus
80
(P) remain in solution13. This drawback is also commonly identified in practice, as
81
photosynthetic systems are often unable to meet nutrient removal requirements14. One approach
82
to address this stoichiometric imbalance may be to integrate established feast/famine cycles of
83
BNR technologies with photosynthetic processes. However, traditional BNR treatment plants
84
rely on microbial communities operated primarily in the dark. Therefore, there is currently very
85
limited understanding of the communities and interactions that may be selected for in engineered
86
systems that combine light and dark environments. Only after these interactions have been
87
identified, may they be managed through operational parameterization (e.g., to select for or
88
against specific microorganisms).
89
In this experiment, we investigated whether photosynthetic oxygenation could be
90
sufficient to allow the establishment of polyP cycling and PAO enrichment. Specifically, a
91
reactor was inoculated with two activated sludge communities, a photosynthetic nitrifying
92
culture and an Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal (EBPR) culture, and operated over
93
approximately two months under light/dark and feast/famine conditions. Furthermore, we
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tracked the microbial community structure derived from this coupling. While technical and
95
economical challenges associated with optimizing light delivery in photosynthetic systems
96
remain a hurdle, our results reveal that it is possible to couple polyP cycling with photosynthetic
97
oxygen production, that this configuration may maintain an enrichment of PAOs, and that
98
continuous illumination does not negatively impact polyP cycling. We discuss intriguing
99
ecological interactions that may be exploited under photosynthetic feast/famine conditions
100
including the enrichment of a novel uncharacterized lineage within the Chlorobi. Lastly, the
101
community analysis suggests that a key feature of photosynthetic aeration is the avoidance of gas
102
stripping, and consequently, the development of syntrophic communities relying on gaseous
103
metabolites such as H2.
104
Materials and Methods
105
Seed sludge
106
The bioreactor was inoculated with sludge from two lab scale wastewater treatment systems: an
107
EBPR system achieving P removal and a photosynthetic bioreactor achieving nitrification.
108
Operational parameters for the EBPR system are as previously reported15. The operational
109
parameters for the photosynthetic nitrification system were identical to those described below,
110
except with no added acetate16. Mixed liquor from each reactor (500 mL) was collected, allowed
111
to settle, decanted and then rinsed with tap water. Decanting and rinsing was done to remove
112
contaminating nutrients such as carbon, and potential terminal electron acceptors such as nitrite
113
and nitrate. The rinsed biomass was then mixed with ~ 2000 mL of anoxic mineral medium
114
prepared by extended purging of the medium with N2 gas.
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Reactor operation
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A 2.5 L reactor was operated as a sequencing batch reactor with a 12-hour cycle with the
117
following sequence: A 30 minute settling, 8 minute decanting, 8 minute fill (8 minutes for water,
118
2 minutes for media), a 2-hour and 14 minute dark period and a 9-hour light period. The reactor
119
was constructed out of a 20" tall x 4" diameter glass and was illuminated with a General Electric
120
18-Inch Basic Fluorescent Light Fixture (product descriptor UCF18/P/BSC) with an illumination
121
intensity of 1200-1300 lux. The stirring speed was set at level 5 using a CimarecTM stirrer
122
(Thermo Scientific, USA). A hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 0.625 days and a solids retention
123
time (SRT) of 13.3 days were achieved by decanting after settling to a volume of 500 mL
124
(removing 2 L of effluent) twice per day, and wasting approximately 188 mL of the mixed
125
volume once a day. After an initial 10 minutes of the dark period, 25 mL of media A and B,
126
respectively, and 1950 mL of H2O were pumped into the reactor. Media A was a mineral
127
medium composed of 13.1 g/L sodium acetate trihydrate, 0.88 g/L of KH2PO4, 9.1 g/L of
128
NaHCO3 and 0.68 g/L of KHSO4. Media B was composed of 1.96 g/L NH4Cl, 4.44 g/L
129
CaCl2·2H2O, 3.03 g/L MgSO4 and 20mL of a trace element solution composed of 5.51 g/L citric
130
acid, 4.03 g/L hippuric acid, 0.73 g/L Na3NTA.H2O, 0.3 g/L Na3EDTA·4H2O, 3.03 g/L
131
FeCl3·6H2O, 0.5 g/L H3BO3, 0.3 g/L ZnSO4·7H2O, 0.24 g/L MnCl2·4H2O, 0.12 g/L
132
CuSO4·5H2O, 0.06 g/L KI, 0.06 g/L Na2MoO4·2H2O, 0.06 g/L CoCl2·6H2O, 0.06 g/L
133
NiCl2·6H2O, 0.06 g/L Na2WO4·2H2O. Throughout the cycle, pH was monitored using an EW-
134
56700-10 Eutech Instruments pH 190 1/8-DIN pH/ORP controller (Cole-Parmer, Vernon Hills,
135
IL). The pH was automatically adjusted using 5% HCl and 50 g/L of Na2CO3 to a set point of 7.5
136
with a hysteresis value of 0.1. After operating in this fashion for 46 days (~3.5 SRTs), the dark
137
period was eliminated during an additional 21 days of operation (~1.5 SRT), to investigate
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whether P cycling could be sustained under continuous illumination. The analytical chemistry,
139
DNA extraction, and sequencing methodology followed standard practices and may be found in
140
the Supplemental Methods.
141
Nucleotide accession numbers
142
The full 16S and 18S data sets were deposited to the National Center for Biotechnology
143
Information (NCBI) Sequence Read Archive (SRA) under accession number SRP073389.
144
Results
145
Reactor performance
146
Based on reactor performance and operational parameters, three distinct phases were observed
147
(Figure 1A). Phase 1 was characterized by a rapid stabilization of P removal, polyP cycling, and
148
a slow degradation of N removal. Phase 2 was characterized by continued stability in P removal
149
and increasing N removal. Finally, Phase 3 was defined by the shift in operational mode from
150
dark/light cycles to continuous illumination.
151
Near complete P removal was achieved by day four of reactor operation and was
152
maintained (94±7% removal) for the entirety of reactor operation (Figure 1A, Table 1). The
153
average P removal showed improvement during each phase, however only the difference
154
between Phase 1 and 3 was statistically significant (Supplemental Table 1). Even after initial
155
inoculation (cycle 1), when low P removal efficiency was observed, P release and uptake
156
occurred. P release and uptake then continued for the duration of reactor operation, even when
157
operated under continuous illumination (Figure 1B-D, Table 1). Both TP and dry cell weight
158
increased slightly throughout operation but stabilized between Phase 2 and 3 (Table 1). The ratio
159
of TP/dry cell weight did not vary significantly throughout reactor operation (Table 1).
160
After the initial seeding event (Cycle 1), total soluble N removal was relatively high but
161
decreased until reaching a minimal efficiency at the end of Phase 1 (Figure 1A). During Phase 2, 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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without any modification in operational conditions, N removal rebounded, reaching peak
163
efficiency during Phase 3 where, on average, approximately 90% of the soluble N was removed
164
(Figure 1A, Table 1). During Phase 1, NH4+-N levels increased during the feast period (Figure
165
1B, Table 1) relative to at the beginning of the cycle. The change in concentration of NH4+-N at
166
the anaerobic feast (∆ NH4+-N AF) was significantly different than in Phase 2 and 3, where this
167
behavior was not observed (Table 1, Figure 1B-D). NO2--N and NO3--N levels were low at the
168
end of the feast period during Phases 1 and 2, and completely absent during Phase 3, a difference
169
that was statistically significant (Table 1 and Supplemental Table 1). The NO2--N levels at the
170
end of the cycle increased significantly from Phase 1 to 3, with intermediate values at Phase 2
171
(Table 1 and Supplemental Table 1). NO3--N was completely absent in Phase 3 (Table 1), a
172
statistically significant difference from Phase 1 (Supplemental Table 1). The summary of
173
chemical data collected at the beginning, end of anaerobic feast, and end of the cycle may be
174
found in Supplemental Spreadsheet 2. A summary of chemical data from the days in which a full
175
chemical profile was conducted (Figures 1B-D) may be found in Supplemental Spreadsheets 3-7.
176
During all three phases, dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations were near saturation (~8
177
mg/L) immediately after fill. This oxygen was depleted rapidly and remained below 0.05 mg/L
178
until the end of the cycle when oxygen would occasionally begin to accumulate until the settling
179
period began (Figures 2A and B). Specifically, DO concentrations were below 0.05 mg/L
180
approximately 70% of the time, between 0.05-0.6 mg/L approximately 17% of the time, and
181
above 0.6 mg/L only 13% of the time (Supplemental Figure 1C). DO accumulation at the end of
182
the cycle differed between phases as well, especially during Phase 3, when continuous
183
illumination resulted in frequent accumulation of DO at the end of the cycle (Supplemental
184
Figure 1D). Nitrite and nitrate concentrations were positively correlated with end-of-cycle DO
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concentrations. In contrast, P concentrations at the end of the anaerobic feast period were
186
negatively correlated with end-of-cycle DO concentrations. A complete DO profile and analysis
187
of end of cycle concentrations may be found in Supplemental Spreadsheet 8.
188
Oxygen diffusion and theoretical oxygen demand
189
In this experiment the primary purpose was to investigate whether photosynthetic oxygenation
190
was sufficient to drive polyP cycling, if a PAO enrichment could be maintained, and what
191
flanking community developed under such conditions. Here we demonstrate that oxygen
192
diffusion into the reactor and the introduction of oxygen through the influent was a negligible
193
source of oxygen. A negative control using tap water showed diffusion into the reactor occurring
194
at a rate of approximately 0.04 mg/L/hr. This suggests that reactor was nearly airtight and that
195
diffusion accounted for approximately 0.5 mg/L over a 12-hour cycle. An additional abiotic
196
source of oxygen is through the addition of the influent, which had oxygen at saturation and
197
contributed approximately 8.5 mg/L at the beginning of each cycle. Together, these abiotic
198
sources of oxygen account for approximately 9 mg/L. In contrast, the theoretical oxygen demand
199
(ThOD) of the influent, primarily in the form of carbonaceous and nitrogen species was 246
200
mg/L O2, in the form of ThODAcetic acid (103 mg/L O2), ThODHippuric acid (79 mg/L O2), ThODCitric
201
acid
202
that does not include the oxygen demand from the degradation of autochthonous carbon
(41 mg/L O2) and ThODAmmonia (23 mg/L O2), respectively. Thus, a conservative estimate
) of oxygen required to achieve nutrient removal in the
203
demonstrates that less than 5% (
204
bioreactor had abiotic origin.
205
Raw read processing
206
A total of 8,149,404 16S and 11,581,146 18S raw reads were generated. After quality filtering,
207
adapter trimming and merging paired end reads, a total of 3,988,393 16S and 5,134,217 18S 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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contigs remained that were further processed using the Mothur MiSeq standard operating
209
procedure (SOP) pipeline17. Following the SOP guidelines, preclustering and chimera removal
210
were conducted on the contigs resulting in 2,850,182 16S and 4,616,271 18S total reads
211
remaining in each data set. These reads were represented by 104,266 unique 16S and 54,226
212
unique 18S sequences, respectively. The number of reads per sample ranged from 110,901 to
213
161,901 in the 16S dataset and 192,198 to 266,630 in the 18S dataset, and therefore, each sample
214
was subsampled to a depth of 110,901 and 192,198 respectively. These values are summarized in
215
Supplemental Spreadsheet 9.
216
16S and 18S rRNA gene based microbial community analysis
217
Principal components analysis demonstrated tight clustering of triplicate samples for both 16S
218
and 18S datasets (Figure 2A and B), and this was corroborated by hierarchical clustering analysis
219
(Supplemental Figure 2). Thus all downstream analysis on relative abundance for each date was
220
conducted using the average OTU read abundance obtained from the triplicates.
221
The clustering analysis of the top 20 OTUs revealed that two distinct dominant Bacterial
222
communities were found in the time series. Initially, the community was characterized by an
223
abundance
224
Flavobacterium, Chryseobacterium, Inhella, Lysobacter and Ignavibacterium (Figure 2C). As
225
time progressed, a new community developed in the reactor characterized by Ferruginibacter,
226
Dechloromonas,
227
Sediminibacterium,
228
Accumulibacter (OTU000005). Notable differences between the early and late communities
229
included selection for different Accumulibacter OTUs, and the enrichment of the Cyanobacterial
of
Accumulibacter
(OTU000001),
Saprospiraceae,
Chitinophagaceae,
Leptolyngbya,
Obscuribacterales,
Sulfuritalea,
Lewinella,
Chlorobiales;SJA-28 Accumulibacter
Thauera,
(OTU000002),
(OTU000003)
and
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lineages Leptolyngbya18 and Obscuribacterales19, H2-oxidizing facultative autotrophic
231
Sulfuritalea, and uncharacterized Chlorobiales;SJA-28 (Figure 2C).
232
In contrast to the Bacterial community (based on 16S rRNA), much of the Eukaryotic
233
community (based on 18S rRNA) was unclassified and no specific lineages displayed a distinct
234
pattern of either increasing or decreasing across the time series (Figure 2D). However, a clear
235
pattern in the photosynthetic eukaryotic community was identified, which was initially
236
dominated by Desmodesmus and transitioned to a more diverse assemblage, which included
237
Desmodesmus, Parachlorella, Bacillariophytina, and Characiopodium. Numerous potential
238
predatory eukaryotic organisms were also identified including Gymnophrys, Rotifera and
239
Alveolata. However, their presence was sporadic and no pattern was detected (Figure 2D).
240
We examined the relative abundance of OTUs classified as taxa likely to be involved in
241
nitrification. The nitrifying community relative abundance decreased over the course of the
242
experiment (Figure 3). Initially, the ammonia oxidizing community was dominated by
243
OTU000120 and OTU000327, however after day 28 (cycle 57) OTU000322 increased in relative
244
abundance (Figure 3A). In contrast, the nitrite oxidizing community was composed of only a
245
single identified OTU (OTU000052) within the Nitrospira, which saw a large relative decrease
246
from initial concentrations (Figure 3B). No Nitrosospira, Nitrosococcus, ammonia oxidizing
247
archaea, Nitrobacter, Nitrococcus, and Nitrotoga, were detected.
248
Phylogenetic analysis of Accumulibacter, Nitrosomonas and Chlorobi OTUs
249
A phylogenetic analysis of each operational taxonomic unit (OTU) classified within
250
Accumulibacter, Nitrosomonas and Chlorobi was conducted to further resolve their taxonomy
251
(See Supplemental Methods). The phylogenetic analysis revealed that the dominant
252
Accumulibacter OTUs each had different taxonomies including Clade IIC Acc-SG2
253
(OTU000001), Clade IIC Acc-SG3 (OTU000003), and Clade IIB (OTU000005)20,21 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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(Supplemental Figure 3). A majority of the Nitrosomonas-related OTUs clustered with
255
Nitrosomonas oligotropha (OTU000327, OTU000120, OTU000714 and OTU000512), however
256
the dominant Nitrosomonas OTU at the end of the investigation was Nitrosomonas ureae
257
(OTU000322) (Supplemental Figure 4).
258
The
phylogenetic
analysis
of
sequences
affiliated
with
Chlorobiales;SJA-28
259
(OTU000002) revealed a
lineage composed of at least 3 distinct monophyletic groups
260
henceforth referred to as Chlorobiales;SJA-28 Clade I, Clade II, and Clade III (Figure 4).
261
Together, these three clades form an uncharacterized monophyletic lineage sister to the
262
Chlorobea. Clade I was composed of sequences identified in anaerobic digesters, hydrothermal
263
soils and termite hindguts. When reported, the relative abundance of Clade I type sequences were
264
always below 5%. Clade II type sequences contained clone SJA-2822, for which the current
265
taxonomical classification is based. The habitats for which Clade II type sequences were detected
266
included microbial fuel cells, anaerobic digesters and gas-polluted soil. Relative abundance
267
estimates for Clade II type sequences were always below 3.1%. Sequences within Clade III
268
originate predominately from wastewater treatment systems (11/13), of which EBPR-type
269
systems23–25 with acetate, propionate or municipal wastewater as a primary carbon source were
270
the most abundant. Other habitats included anaerobic digesters with carbon sources of municipal
271
wastewater26 and benzene27, Anammox reactors (unpublished), a flow through column reactor28,
272
vermiculture system29, deep groundwater (unpublished) and rhizosphere30. In contrast to other
273
studies, Chlorobiales;SJA-28 Clade III type sequences were identified with high relative
274
abundance (>25%) in this investigation, and in an nitrate reducing, anaerobic benzene degrading
275
culture amended with H227.
276
Discussion
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Assessing reactor function under light/dark cycles
278
One of the basic failures of algal-based treatment systems is their variable and inconsistent
279
ability to completely remove nutrient contaminants such as P14. Conversely, while BNR systems
280
generally achieve stable nutrient removal, they currently lack a substantial mechanism for CO2
281
sequestration. A potential solution would be to integrate photosynthetic and polyP accumulating
282
technologies, thus improving nutrient removal and CO2 sequestration by exploiting the
283
feast/famine physiology of PAOs and the photosynthetic capabilities of diverse bacterial and
284
eukaryotic lineages. In this investigation, the primary question was whether photosynthetic
285
oxygen production was sufficient to drive polyP cycling and enrich for PAOs. We demonstrated
286
that polyP accumulation, polyP cycling, and enrichment of PAOs under photosynthetic
287
conditions and with no mechanical aeration were achieved (Figure 1, Figure 2). Given the low
288
cost of light-emitting diode (LED) technology and its increasingly sophisticated application in
289
wastewater biotechnology31, these results suggest that polyP cycling may be successfully
290
coupled with photosynthetic oxygenation to improve P removal in algal systems while
291
simultaneously improving carbon sequestration in activated sludge-type systems.
292
P removal rates and polyP cycling remained stable in our experiment. In particular,
293
polymer cycling was demonstrated by high levels of P release (~30 mg/L) after acetate addition
294
and subsequent uptake. Additionally, the TP/TSS ratios (~0.16) demonstrate that the P fraction
295
of the biomass were approximately 10 times greater than in non-polyP accumulating systems
296
(~0.01-0.02). In comparison, the N removal rates decreased initially during phase 1, rebounded
297
during phase 2, finally reaching N removal rates averaging 90% during phase 3. Two
298
observations may explain the N removal dynamics. First, during Phase 1 of operation, there was
299
a slight release of ammonium during the dark period (Figure 1B). As operation progressed, and
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as the community shifted, this accumulation diminished and then ceased during Phase 2 and 3
301
(Figure 1C-D, Table 1). The second observation that may explain the depressed N-removal early
302
in this experiment was a shift in the nitrifying community (Figure 3). The seed nitrification
303
community originated from a photobioreactor to which no acetate was added. The oxygen
304
demand from acetate addition likely resulted in greater competition for oxygen than the
305
conditions to which the nitrifying community had originally adapted. While nitrifying
306
populations are sensitive to oxygen, they have been previously shown to adapt to low-DO
307
conditions2. Indeed, we observed a shift in the dominant Nitrosomonas OTU during this period
308
(Figure 3) upon which a diverse assemblage of Nitrosomonas oligotropha OTUs was replaced by
309
Nitrosomonas ureae. The increase in Nitrosomonas ureae relative abundance may be linked with
310
the initial increases in ammonium during the dark period in Phase 1, as urea release from
311
photosynthetic organisms may have eventually selected for organisms capable of urea
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degradation. Given the low relative abundance of N. oligotropha and N. ureae, additional
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investigations are required to determine the ecological significance of these populations and the
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importance of alternative mechanisms such as assimilation for N removal in low-DO
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photosynthetic systems. However, it is important to note that these results are consistent with
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investigations of low-DO nitrifying systems, in which the low abundance of recognized
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ammonia oxidizers is not sufficient to explain the extent of nitrification achieved in these
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reactors2,32.
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The nitrite oxidizing community did not exhibit such an adaptive response, as
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demonstrated by an increased accumulation of nitrite and loss of nitrate accumulation during
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Phase 3 (Table 1). This is in contrast to what is generally observed in BNR systems, where
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nitrate often accumulates. The deterioration of nitrite oxidation may be explained by an extended
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lag in the adaptive response of the nitrite oxidizing community, or environmental and ecological
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conditions that selected against nitrite oxidation in favor of denitrification. Investigations into
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low-DO systems have shown that there is a lag phase between altered oxygen concentrations and
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community response2,33. Taken together, the efficient and stable N-removal rates achieved during
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phase 3 of operation, previous reports that nitrification may be successfully coupled with
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photosynthetic oxygenation16, and may be achieved at low-DO33, even with low abundance of
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recognized ammonia oxidizers2, suggest that low-DO photosynthetic systems may be designed
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achieve N removal.
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Due to the limited scope and duration of this experiment, additional long-term ecological
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research is needed into photosynthetic feast/famine systems operated under stable state. In
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particular while ammonium, nitrite and nitrate measurements taken in this study demonstrate N
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removal under photosynthetic conditions, the relative contribution of N removal through
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assimilation versus nitrification/denitrification must be investigated in the future. Furthermore,
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additional experiments are necessary to determine if photosynthetic feast/famine conditions
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provide a selective mechanism for the denitrification of nitrite, as this would lower the total
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oxygen demand required for N removal.
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Assessing reactor function under continuous illumination
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One of the central tenets of successful polyP accumulation in BNR technologies is the strict
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separation of carbon and terminal electron acceptor availability. However, simultaneous
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anaerobic and aerobic processes, such as nitrification, denitrification and EBPR, have been
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achieved under continuously aerated conditions in what is termed simultaneous biological
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nutrient removal (SBNR)6. In this experiment when the dark cycle was eliminated and the
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reactor was operated under continuous illumination (Phase 3), P removal, N removal, and polyP
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cycling dynamics remained unperturbed (Figure 1 D, Table 1). This suggests that, as seen in
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some mechanically aerated systems6, photosynthetic communities may achieve SBNR by
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operating without strict separation of anaerobic/aerobic (dark/light) cycles.
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In BNR systems that are mechanically aerated, oxygen must diffuse from the gas phase,
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to the liquid phase and finally to the cell34. Thus, mechanically aerated BNR processes rely upon
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habitat heterogeneity across the macro and microenvironment in order to achieve SBNR6.
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Conversely, when oxygen is produced at the cellular level through photosynthesis, oxygen
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measured in the bulk fluid must first diffuse through the boundary layer around a cell, or floc, in
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which it was produced (Supplemental Figure 5). Thus, while both mechanically aerated and
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photosynthetically oxygenated treatment processes rely upon habitat heterogeneity between
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macro and microenvironments, they are fundamentally different. Mechanically aerated systems
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have oxygenated macro-environments with diffusion limitations into the microenvironments,
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whereas photosynthetic systems have anaerobic macro-environments with oxygenated
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microenvironments. Furthermore, mechanical aeration purges native gas production, potentially
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limiting the development of communities based on metabolite exchange of gasses such as H2. As
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a result, photosynthetic treatment systems achieve simultaneous N and P removal in a novel, and
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fundamentally different, SBNR arrangement than traditional mechanical aeration under which
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distinct microbial communities are expected to develop.
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Community assembly
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The cyclic feast/famine conditions typical of EBPR systems result in a strong selective pressure
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for PAO enrichment35. In these traditional treatment systems, the carbon pool is primarily
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allochthonous, in the form of organic carbon introduced with the influent. The cyclic
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feast/famine environment found under photosynthetic-polyP accumulating conditions have a
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similarly strong selective pressure for PAO. However, the addition of light and the removal of
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mechanical aeration significantly alter the flow of energy within photosynthetic-polyP
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accumulating treatment systems, resulting in the co-enrichment of diverse functional guilds.
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Eukaryotic photosynthesis and aerobic heterotrophs
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The assemblage of eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms supported a relatively large (~24%)
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assemblage of putatively aerobic polymer hydrolyzing heterotrophs (Figure 2). Especially well
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represented were lineages within the Sphingobacteriales (two Chitinophagaceae OTUs,
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Lewinella, Ferruginibacter and two Saprospiraceae OTUs), which are commonly found as
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epiphytic polymer hydrolyzing bacteria in activated sludge systems36,37. Interestingly, both the
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dominant photosynthetic Eukaryote, and aerobic hydrolyzing bacteria shifted after initial
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inoculation, suggesting that species-specific interactions between photosynthetic and associated
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heterotrophs may exist. Identifying strategies and operational parameters to manage oxygen
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transfer between oxygen-producers and different guilds of oxygen-consumers may be important
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to further develop photosynthetically oxygenated systems. For example, reducing oxygen
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demand by algal associated heterotrophic aerobes would increase the availability of oxygen for
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processes such as nitrification or for PAO metabolism. One strategy to achieve these may be to
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identify operational parameters that limit algal exudates, or algal turnover (e.g., senescence and
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decay). Incorporating measurements that quantify algal-based heterotrophy in comparison to
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simple operational changes such as the SRT represent an important first step for future
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investigations.
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Polyphosphate accumulation
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Throughout reactor operation the Accumulibacter relative abundance decreased and was
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Acc-SG2 dominated but was eventually replaced by Clade IIC Acc-SG3 and Clade IIB (Figure
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2). Despite the dynamic nature of the Accumulibacter community relative abundance, reactor
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performance remained stable with regards to P removal aerobically, release anaerobically, and
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the TP/dry cell weight (Table 1). Furthermore, when the reactor was operated under continuous
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illumination, these functional parameters remained stable despite the simultaneous availability of
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both organic carbon sources (acetate) and light, which are conditions favorable for
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photoheterotrophy. This suggests that under photosynthetic conditions, Accumulibacter out-
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competed other heterotrophic/photoheterotrophic organisms for acetate, likely because of the
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evolution of numerous mechanisms for the acquisition of acetate and rapid acetate uptake
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kinetics38. Two common organisms capable of photoheterotrophic growth in wastewater
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treatment systems, Rhodopseudomonas39 and Rhodobacter40, were absent or at very low relative
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abundance (