Subscriber access provided by READING UNIV
Article
Highly Effective Polyphosphate Synthesis, Phosphate Removal and Concentration Using Engineered Environmental Bacteria Based on a Simple Solo Medium-copy Plasmid Strategy Xin Wang, Xiaomeng Wang, Kaimin Hui, Wei Wei, Wen Zhang, Ai-Jun Miao, Lin Xiao, and Liuyan Yang Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04532 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Nov 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 2, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
Highly Effective Polyphosphate Synthesis, Phosphate Removal and Concentration Using Engineered Environmental Bacteria Based on a Simple Solo Medium-copy Plasmid Strategy
Xin Wang,† Xiaomeng Wang,† Kaimin Hui,§ Wei Wei,‡ Wen Zhang,† Aijun Miao,† Lin Xiao,† Liuyan Yang*†
†
State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, School of the Environment, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210046, PR China
§
Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Biodiversity & Biotechnology and Jiangsu Key Laboratory for
Aquatic Crustacean Diseases, College of Life Sciences, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, 210046, PR China ‡
Institute of Chemistry and BioMedical Science, State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical
Biotechnology, School of Life Science, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210046, PR China *
Correspondence author. Phone: +86 25 8968 0257, E-mail:
[email protected] Submitted to: Environmental Science & Technology
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Table of Contents (TOC) Art
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 36
Page 3 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
1
ABSTRACT
2
Microbial polyphosphate (polyP) production is vital to phosphate removal from wastewater.
3
However, to date, the engineered polyP synthesis using genetically accessible environmental
4
bacteria remains a challenge. This study develops a simple solo medium-copy plasmid based
5
polyphosphate kinase (PPK1) overexpression strategy for achieving maximum intracellular
6
polyphosphate accumulation by environmental bacteria. The polyP content of the subsequently
7
engineered Citrobacter freundii (CPP) could reach as high as 12.7% of its dry weight. The
8
biomass yield of CPP was also guaranteed because of negligible metabolic burden effects
9
resulting from the medium plasmid copy number. Consequently, substantial phosphate (Pi)
10
removal from the ambient environment was achieved simultaneously. Due to the need of
11
exogenous Pi for in vivo ATP regeneration, CPP could thoroughly remove Pi from synthetic
12
municipal wastewater when it was applied for the “one-step” removal of Pi with a bench-scale
13
sequence batch membrane reactor. Almost all the phosphorus except for that assimilated by CPP
14
for cellular growth could be recovered in the form of more concentrated Pi. Overall, engineering
15
environmental bacteria to overexpress PPK1 via a solo medium-copy plasmid strategy may
16
represent a valuable general option for not only biotechnological research based on sufficient
17
intracellular polyP production but also Pi removal from wastewater and Pi enrichment.
1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
18
INTRODUCTION
19
Inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) is present in almost all organisms, where it is considered to be a
20
reserve of phosphate (Pi) and high-energy phosphoanhydride bonds.1,2 PolyP of prokaryotic
21
origin is primarily synthesized by polyphosphate kinase (PPK1), which reversibly catalyzes the
22
transfer of terminal Pi from ATP to a growing polyP chain.3,4 Microbial polyP is central to
23
enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) from municipal wastewater, in which
24
polyphosphate accumulating organisms (PAOs) take up Pi beyond their growth requirements and
25
concentrate it in biomass as polyP.5 However, because of the unavailability of pure cultures of
26
PAOs and groundless deterioration of the EBPR system,6 studies on removing Pi from
27
wastewater based on engineered production of intracellular polyP using genetically accessible
28
bacteria are of important environmental significance.
29
To date, research on this issue has been mainly conducted in Escherichia coli via two kinds
30
of genetic engineering strategies: (1) the enhancement of Pi transport capability (including
31
increasing the dosage of genes that encode Pi-specific transport systems7,8 and mutation of the
32
phoU gene that encodes a negative regulator of the Pi regulon9-11) and (2) plasmid-borne PPK1
33
overexpression. As far as the latter is concerned, these strategies can be divided into three
34
categories according to the copy number of the plasmid and the number of plasmids that occur in
35
one host cell: (1) solo high-copy plasmid strategies; (2) solo low-copy plasmid strategies; and (3)
36
dual plasmid strategies (i.e., one host cell harboring two plasmids, in which one plasmid
37
overexpresses PPK1 and the other one overexpresses auxiliary enzymes to increase the amount 2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 36
Page 5 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
38
of intermediates related to ATP generation and/or regeneration).7,8,12,13 Benefiting from these
39
strategies, a certain amount of intracellular polyP accumulation has been achieved. However, in
40
most cases, the polyP yields have a poor ratio of achieved versus theoretically estimated
41
accumulation (< 10-20% of the cell dry weight).6 Obviously, both PPK1 overexpression and
42
polyP synthesis require a metabolite, ATP, which is vital and limited at any life stage of the host
43
cell. From the metabolic engineering perspective, to maximize polyP productivity, researchers
44
must weigh the trade-offs between the ATP budget put into PPK1 overexpression and that
45
reserved as the substrate for polyP synthesis.14,15 In this regard, it should be evident that neither
46
the high-copy plasmid strategy (including dual plasmid strategy) nor the low-copy plasmid
47
strategy is an optimal option. For the former, the presence of one high-copy plasmid can divert a
48
substantial amount of ATP from polyP synthesis toward plasmid DNA replication and
49
plasmid-borne gene translation,16,17 which may cause a poor polyP yield because of the lack of
50
substrate. For the latter, inadequate PPK1 dosage resulting from the low copy number of the
51
plasmid may also cause a poor polyP yield because of the lack of enzymes. Therefore, a genetic
52
engineering strategy for highly effective polyP production based on a more balanced distribution
53
of ATP between PPK1 overexpression and its substrate reservation warrants further exploitation.
54
Based on these valuable findings, we now speculate that a solo medium-copy plasmid
55
strategy (i.e., overexpression of PPK1 from one medium-copy plasmid, which is only harbored
56
in the host cell) may be a better option for genetically engineered polyP production. The strategy
57
was assessed using an environmental bacterium, Citrobacter freundii ATCC 8090, and its 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
58
superiority was validated by comparison with all three types of strategies adopted by those
59
studies with E. coli. Moreover, to determine how the second plasmid itself in the dual plasmid
60
strategy affected the genetically manipulated polyP production, we constructed a high-copy
61
plasmid harboring a reporter gene that is not directly related to the polyP synthetic pathway and
62
introduced it into the engineered C. freundii (which already harbored a medium-copy plasmid) to
63
mimic a dual plasmid strategy. Via this strategy, the potential negative effects imposed by the
64
second plasmid were comprehensively demonstrated at different levels, including the biomass
65
yield, polyP production, ppk1 transcription, host cell morphology, and polyP synthesis kinetics.
66
In addition, we also performed Pi removal and concentration from synthetic municipal
67
wastewater using a sequence batch membrane bioreactor (SBMBR) to illustrate the feasibility of
68
the application of the environmental bacterium engineered based on the solo medium-copy
69
plasmid strategy.
70 71
EXPERIMENTAL
72
Plasmids and Bacterial Strains. The bacterial strains, plasmids and primers used in this study
73
are all listed in Table S1 (Supporting Information, SI). Wild-type Citrobacter freundii ATCC
74
8090 was purchased from China Center of Industrial Culture Collection (CICC, China) and
75
designated CWT. A broad-host-range medium-copy plasmid, pBBR1MCS2,18 harboring the ppk1
76
of CWT was constructed and then transformed into CWT, and the resulting recombinant was
77
designated CPP. Before introducing a second plasmid into CPP, the following three 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 36
Page 7 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
78
characteristics of the plasmid were considered: (1) a high-copy plasmid that could impose
79
significant metabolic burden upon the host cell; (2) a plasmid that possesses the same leaky
80
expression system as pBBR1MCS2; and (3) a plasmid that can express a fluorescent reporter to
81
serve as an indication of whether the leaky expression from the lac promoter could be achieved.
82
To meet these conditions, the gene rfp, which encodes red fluorescent protein (RFP),19 was
83
cloned into the high-copy plasmid pMD19-Simple (TaKaRa, Japan). CPP transformed with
84
pMD19-rfp was designated CPR. The specific gene cloning, plasmid construction and
85
transformant selection procedures are detailed in Text S1.
86
Culture Conditions. To obtain uniform polyP-free inocula, CWT and its derivatives were
87
cultured overnight at 30°C in LB medium supplemented with antibiotics as required. Under such
88
nutrient-rich conditions no significant intracellular polyP formed.20 PolyP-free cells were
89
harvested by centrifugation (8000 rpm, 5 min) and washed twice with HEPES buffer (20 mM,
90
pH 7.0). For practical applications, nutrient-poor synthetic wastewater (without chemical inducer
91
and antibiotics) that mimics municipal sewage was adopted to evaluate the strains constructed in
92
this study. Synthetic municipal wastewater (SMW) was prepared from inorganic and organic
93
components with deionized water according to Bassin et al.21 and contained per liter 300 mg
94
glucose (300 mg-COD/L), 100 mg tryptone (50 mg-COD/L), 50 mg NaCl, 226 mg MgSO4·7H2O,
95
180 mg NH4Cl, and 1 mg yeast extract. The Pi concentration in SMW was set at 30 mg-P/L by
96
the addition of 220 mg KH2PO4·3H2O per liter to prevent Pi from becoming a growth-limiting
97
factor unless otherwise indicated. For all experiments, the polyP-free culture volume to be 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
98
inoculated into the SMW was calculated beforehand to attain an initial OD600 of 0.15. After
99
inoculation, 500 mL Erlenmeyer flasks containing 200 mL SMW were shaken at 200 rpm on a
100
rotary shaker at 30°C. Liquid samples of 4 mL were taken at the indicated time points for
101
analysis. The OD600 was monitored using a UV1800 spectrophotometer (Shimadzu, Japan),
102
whereas the Pi, total phosphorous (TP), chemical oxygen demand (COD), volatile suspended
103
solids (VSS) and cell dry weight (DW) were measured via standard methods.22
104
Intracellular PolyP Assay. Intracellular polyP was quantified according to the direct
105
4’-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI)-based protocol described by Kulakova et al.23 using Type
106
45 polyP (Sigma, USA) as a standard and expressed as milligrams phosphorus per gram VSS
107
(mg-P/g-VSS). The VSS was correlated to OD600 using the equation: VSS (mg/L) = 161.25 ×
108
OD600 + 48.51 (R2 = 0.9937), which was determined for C. freundii in SMW. The VSS data were
109
converted to DW using the conversion factor 0.80 mg-VSS/mg-DW for the convenience of
110
comparison whenever needed. In vivo ATP measurements of each strain were performed with a
111
modified protocol described by Gray et al.24 Briefly, at the indicated OD600, 100 µL cell cultures
112
were added to 900 µL 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.8) and incubated at 99°C on a ThermoMixer
113
(Eppendorf, USA) for 5 min. After that, the samples were cooled on ice and the total cellular
114
ATP was assayed with the Luminescent ATP Detection Assay Kit (Abcam, UK).
115
Quantitative Real-time PCR. After harvesting bacteria from either LB medium or SMW,
116
purification of total RNA was performed using RNAiso Plus reagent (TaKaRa, Japan) following
117
the protocol described by the manufacturer. One microgram of qualified total RNA was subjected 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 8 of 36
Page 9 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
118
to reverse transcription with a PrimeScript RT reagent Kit with gDNA Eraser per the
119
manufacturer’s instructions (TaKaRa, Japan). qRT-PCR of the resulting cDNA was performed
120
with gene-specific primers (Table S1) on a CFX Connect Real-Time PCR Detection System
121
(Bio-Rad, USA) with a SYBR Premix Ex Taq (Tli RNaseH Plus) Kit (TaKaRa, Japan). Standard
122
curves of cDNA dilutions were used to determine the PCR efficiency. An expression data
123
analysis was performed by the Pfaffl method of relative quantification using CFX Manager 3.1
124
software (Bio-Rad, USA).
125
Microscopic Examination and Live Cell Confocal Imaging. The presence of intracellular
126
polyP granules was examined by light microscopy after staining the cells according to the
127
method of Albert.25 To further display the morphology of each strain, a Nikon A1 confocal laser
128
scanning microscope (Nikon, Japan) equipped with different filter sets was used to acquire
129
images after the cells were incubated with 10 µM DAPI in darkness for 1 h.26
130
PolyP Synthesis Kinetics. Intracellular polyP content measured for CPP and CPR during the
131
polyP synthesis stage was used for data fitting to depict their respective polyP synthesis kinetic
132
behavior. For convenient operation, short term polyP synthesis experiments performed with CPP
133
were conducted in triplicate Corning 50 mL Mini Bioreactors (Corning, USA) containing 10 mL
134
SMW with different Pi concentrations (4, 8, 20, 40 and 80 mg-P/L). The intracellular polyP
135
content was determined at times 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, and 5 h and then plotted with time.
136
SBMBR. To achieve “one-step” removal of Pi and facilitate the following Pi enrichment, a
137
bench-scale MBR with a working volume of 22 L was employed in this study (Figure 6a, 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
138
detailed information on its configuration is provided in Text S2). SMW with 8 mg-P/L Pi freshly
139
prepared from tap water was used to feed the reactor. The MBR was conducted in a batch regime
140
with a cycle duration of 18 h by sequencing through three steps: (1) filling and preculture (4 h 15
141
min); (2) continuous feeding and permeate filtration (12 h); and (3) biomass concentrating and
142
retentate discharge (1 h 45 min). In the first step, the reactor was filled with 22 L SMW and
143
inoculated with polyP-free CPP afterwards. Aerobic preculturing was initiated to remove the
144
in-reactor Pi. When the in-reactor Pi was depleted, step two was introduced to achieve
145
continuous Pi removal from the feeding SMW. Once Pi (≥ 0.01 mg-P/L) could be detected in the
146
permeate fluid, water feeding ceased and permeate filtration carried on till the liquid level was
147
below the membrane module. At the time of step three, the concentrated retentate (i.e., enriched
148
cell suspension) was withdrawn from the bottom of the reactor and added to two 5 L glass
149
vessels (4.5 L cell suspension per vessel, Figure 6c inset), after which the vessels were sealed by
150
tightening the lids. The subsequent Pi release assessment was carried out under anaerobic
151
conditions without the addition of glucose or other organic substrates to save the consumption of
152
both aeration and carbon source. Throughout the experiment, the pH and dissolved oxygen (DO)
153
were monitored using HQ 30d portable meters (Hach, USA) but not controlled (Figure S5a).
154
Mixed liquor and effluent were regularly taken from the reactor or the outlet of the permeate
155
pump, respectively, for analysis. The Pi concentration of the enriched cell suspension supernatant
156
was monitored to determine the end point of the Pi release stage. Details of the global evaluation
157
of Pi recovery efficiency using such a treatment process is provided in Text S3. 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 10 of 36
Page 11 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
158 159
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
160
Intracellular PolyP Production and Exogenous Pi Removal. Prior to the beginning of this
161
study, an environmental bacterium other than E. coli was selected to serve as the starting strain
162
because E. coli is not suitable for practical wastewater treatment. In the E. coli chromosome,
163
there is one native ppk1 gene copy located on an operon that also includes the
164
exopolyphosphatase gene ppx.3 Considering the comparability of results, those bacteria that are
165
of the same genotype as E. coli were especially desired by this study. After querying the
166
GenBank database in NCBI, one bacterium termed C. freundii ATCC 8090 (accession number
167
NZ_ANAV01000007), which is broadly distributed in soil, water, and sewage,27 was picked and
168
genetically engineered for further study.
169
To test whether the C. freundii derivative that was constructed based on the solo
170
medium-copy strategy could perform well for polyP synthesis in SMW, the polyP content of CPP
171
was intensively measured during the polyP synthesis stage. Both CPR and CWT served as
172
controls. As shown in Figure 1a, the polyP content of CPP increased rapidly and reached up to
173
159 mg-P/g-VSS (127 mg-P/g-DW) at 15 h. Associated with this process was the continuous
174
uptake of exogenous Pi from the SMW, and maximal Pi removal of 19 mg-P/L was then
175
achieved at 15 h (Figure 1b). By contrast, profiles of polyP content versus time obtained with
176
CPR showed a relatively slow increase to its maximal level by approximately 11 h, and the
177
amount of polyP produced (51 mg-P/g-VSS) and hence Pi removed (7 mg-P/L) were both 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
178
significantly (t test, p < 0.05) lower than those obtained with CPP. For CWT, at no time during
179
the course of the experiment was intracellular polyP formed. The small amount of Pi removal
180
could be attributed to stoichiometric incorporation into its cellular growth, which only formed a
181
background TP content of approximately 13 mg-P/g-DW, which is similar to most reported
182
bacteria.7,28 These results indicated that a polyP content equal to 10-fold over the background TP
183
content of CWT can be easily achieved through solo medium-copy plasmid strategy. In addition,
184
decreases in both polyP production and Pi removal approaching 70% of CPR relative to CPP
185
suggested that the cooccurrence of a second high-copy plasmid impacted the genetically
186
engineered enhancement of polyP biosynthesis.
187
However, consistent with a previously observed phenomenon in PPK1 overexpressing E.
188
coli,13,29 polyP degradation accompanied by Pi secretion occurred in both CPP and CPR between
189
15 and 16 h. Since then, they entered the stage of Pi release until their intracellular polyP pools
190
were totally depleted at 92 h (Figure 1b, subsequent data not shown). This result implied that we
191
can recycle phosphorus from CPP in the form of Pi, which will be discussed later. At this point,
192
we asked whether the polyP content of CPP could be further elevated. It is well known that the
193
intracellular polyP of heterotrophic bacteria is essentially derived from exogenous Pi and carbon
194
source (represented as COD).30 In the transition phase of intracellular polyP synthesis and
195
degradation, a certain amount of Pi (11 mg-P/L) still remained in the supernatant, whereas COD
196
was almost depleted (Figures 1b and S1). Therefore, a lack of available COD and not Pi likely
197
accounted for further intracellular polyP accumulation in CPP. To directly test this idea and avoid 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 12 of 36
Page 13 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
198
growth dilution effects,12 filter-sterilized glucose was added to a final concentration of 10
199
mg-COD/L (a value calculated based on Figure S1) per hour. Nevertheless, the polyP content of
200
CPP was not further elevated and Pi release continued (data not shown). This result indicated that
201
the inability of CPP to accumulate more polyP is not because of the depletion of COD but rather
202
a result of another limiting factor or point of regulation in the system. Therefore, we confirmed
203
that 127 mg-P/g-DW was the maximal polyP content that CPP can achieve in the present study.
204
As far as TP content is concerned, the maximal cellular phosphorus level of CPP could reach 140
205
mg-P/g-DW. This value surpassed almost all those achieved in E. coli strains engineered via
206
various plasmid-borne PPK1 overexpression strategies (Table 1) except one derivative termed
207
MV1184 (pBC29 and pEP02.2).7 However, because of metabolic burden effects resulting from
208
sustaining two plasmids in one cell, the cell yield (expressed as maximal OD600) of this strain
209
was severely limited (OD600 ≤ 0.20). Such a difference in biomass ultimately resulted in lower
210
overall Pi removal for this E. coli derivative (8 mg-P/L) compared to CPP (19 mg-P/L).
211
Therefore, our strategy is more advantageous because it achieved highly effective polyP
212
production and substantial Pi removal simultaneously. In addition, the ratio of COD to removed
213
phosphorus (COD : P, 350 : 19) determined from CPP was 18, which is only 60% of that
214
generally required (30 or above) to achieve the high-level removal of phosphorus.31
215
Indeed, cell yield is an important factor for enhanced biological Pi removal, which together
216
with intracellular polyP content determine the overall amount of Pi that can be removed from the
217
wastewater. In addition to MV1184 (pBC29 and pEP02.2), the remaining engineered E. coli 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
218
strains showed cell yields that were more or less decreased compared with their wild type, which
219
was attributed to the metabolic burden imposed by exogenous plasmids. Unexpectedly, however,
220
the cell yields of CPP and CPR were virtually identical (OD600 of 0.52 versus 0.54, Figure 1c),
221
and both significantly (t test, p < 0.05) surpassed that of CWT (OD600 of 0.40). Kuroda et al.
222
demonstrated that polyP can promote protease Lon mediated ribosomal protein subunit
223
degradation, thereby supplying the host cell with amino acids (additional endogenous nutrients)
224
needed for vigorous growth under nutrient-poor conditions.32 In such cases, the true metabolic
225
burden imposed by exogenous plasmids upon cell yield can only be clearly elicited via
226
nutrient-rich cultivation, where intracellular polyP does not form and exogenous nutrients are in
227
surplus. Cell yield determination performed with LB medium confirmed our speculation and
228
demonstrated that the medium-copy plasmid, similar to the low-copy plasmid,12 caused only a
229
slight but not significant decrease in cell yield, whereas the coexistence of a second high-copy
230
plasmid resulted in a significant decline in cell yield (Figure 1c inset).
231
Transcriptional Analysis of Plasmid-borne ppk1. As an indicator of leaky expression, the
232
substantial over-production of RFP by CPR in SMW implied that the lac promoter was strong
233
enough to drive the expression of plasmid-borne genes (Figure 2 inset). To demonstrate that
234
polyP accumulation was a consequence of the elevated transcription of ppk1 mediated by the
235
medium-copy plasmid and assess whether the high-copy plasmid would affect such
236
plasmid-borne ppk1 transcription, the transcription profile of ppk1 in CPP and CPR was
237
investigated. Because there is one copy of native ppk1 present in the chromosome of the host cell 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 36
Page 15 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
238
and it is generally transcribed in coordination with ppx (i.e., transcription levels equal to each
239
other) (Figure S2a), to distinguish the expression of chromosomal ppk1 from that of
240
plasmid-borne ppk1, native ppk1 expression levels in CPP and CPR were first evaluated
241
indirectly via a ppx analysis. As shown in Figure S2b, virtually identical expression profiles of
242
ppx depicted in CPP and CPR relative to CWT indicated that the native ppk1 expression levels
243
stayed unaltered and no imbalance in transcription between endogenous ppk1 and ppx (i.e., ppx
244
downregulation) contributed to polyP production. Thus, elevated ppk1 expression and polyP
245
accumulation detected in the engineered strains were entirely from the exogenous medium-copy
246
plasmid. qRT-PCR revealed that highly elevated ppk1 expression was achieved in both CPP and
247
CPR via the medium-copy plasmid (Figure 2). In addition, at any given time point,
248
plasmid-borne ppk1 transcription in CPR was significantly (t test, p < 0.05) lower than that in
249
CPP. This result indicated that the high-copy plasmid significantly affected ppk1 transcription
250
from the medium-copy plasmid, which could be attributed to the occupation of limited cellular
251
transcription resources by the former. Furthermore, for either CPP or CPR, the host cell
252
continuously downregulated plasmid-borne ppk1 expression as growth progressed until only
253
approximately 30% of the original transcription level remained in the stationary phase (Figure 2).
254
From this perspective (i.e., to sustain a certain ppk1 dosage), relative to low-copy plasmids,
255
medium-copy plasmids are recommended.
256
Diversion of in vivo ATP. As noted above, introducing a second high-copy plasmid into CPP
257
significantly reduced its polyP content. The diversion of substantial amounts of in vivo ATP 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
258
toward futile high-copy plasmid DNA replication and RFP synthesis likely accounts for this
259
decline in intracellular polyP. To directly test this scenario, we measured ATP levels in each
260
strain and compared the absolute ATP decreases in CPP and CPR. As cellular growth proceeded,
261
CWT, which was not capable of forming polyP, maintained most of its ATP, whereas both CPP
262
and CPR were shown to experience a very rapid decline in their in vivo ATP levels (Figure 3).
263
Within the same OD600 range (OD600 0.20 to 0.40), nearly the same quantities of ATP were
264
over-consumed by both strains compared with CWT (Figure 3), whereas the absolute polyP
265
increase in CPR (12 mg-P/g-DW, corresponding to a time frame 2 to 5 h, Figures 1a and 1c) was
266
only approximately 50% of that in CPP (23 mg-P/g-DW, corresponding to a time frame of 1 to 3
267
h, Figures 1a and 1c). These results strongly suggested that CPR actively redirected a substantial
268
proportion of such over-consumed ATP to sustain the high-copy plasmid relevant metabolism
269
rather than polyP synthesis and therefore provided a poor polyP yield.
270
PolyP Granules and Cell Morphology Display. As a routine test, we performed Albert
271
staining to intuitively display the intracellular polyP granules in CPP and CPR cells. During the
272
polyP synthesis stage, almost synchronous formation and augmentation of polyP granules in the
273
CPP population could be easily visualized with an optical microscope (Figure 4a, dashed frame).
274
Consistent with quantitative polyP assays, polyP granules observed in CPP at 15 h were
275
significantly larger than those found in CPR (Figure 4a, solid-line frame). Remarkably, the
276
cellular morphology of CPP even became hard to distinguish because of excess intracellular
277
polyP accumulation. To surmount this obstacle, we applied confocal microscopy to further 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 16 of 36
Page 17 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
278
display the living cells stained with DAPI. As shown in Figure 4b, each CPP cell possessed a
279
huge bright yellow DAPI-polyP fluorescent focus at each pole. Because these two major
280
granules are close to each other and the diameter of both significantly surpasses that of the
281
rod-shaped cell, a unique dumbbell-like bacterium was formed. In contrast, CPP retained its
282
original rod shape because the size of its polyP granules is much smaller. Based on current
283
observation and the indisputable fact that the intracellular storage space of any given bacterium
284
is finite, it is reasonable to envisage that the excessive polyP accumulated in CPP exhausts its
285
cellular storage space and pushes the product level within the crowded environment above the
286
equilibrium concentration, triggering the reaction toward polyP degradation. Therefore, finite
287
cellular storage space might be the bottleneck for genetically engineered polyP production and
288
could explain why the polyP content of CPP cannot be elevated any further.
289
Intracellular PolyP Synthesis Kinetics. Intracellular polyP assays conducted at the polyP
290
synthesis stage revealed that CPP accumulated polyP with a dynamic different from that of CPR.
291
To better understand this difference, we performed data fitting during this time frame and found
292
that intracellular polyP synthesis by CPP followed a zero-order kinetic model (R2 = 0.9928),
293
whereas the same process proceeding in CPR showed a better fit with first-order kinetics (R2 =
294
0.9973) (Figure 5a). Apparently, the high-order kinetic behavior of CPR resulted from an
295
increasing shortage of ATP as it progressed to stationary phase. For CPP, we interpret ATP
296
regeneration as the rate-limiting step rather than saturation of intracellular PPK1’s enzymatic
297
capacity leading to the zero-order kinetic behavior. This interpretation is supported by the 15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
298
observation that IPTG induction of CPP inoculum (which harbored more PPK1) did not change
299
its kinetic behavior or the initial polyP synthesis rate (Figure S3a). This rate, 10 mg-P/g-VSS/h,
300
although approximately one order of magnitude higher than that determined in Lampropedia
301
spp.,33 is only approximately 1/3 of that reported for Microlunatus phosphovoru 34 and that found
302
in PAOs.35 Consequently, to achieve a polyP content as high as that achieved by PAOs, CPP
303
requires a much longer time. Next, to test how CPP would respond to exogenous Pi, the kinetics
304
of initial polyP synthesis as a function of ambient Pi concentration were investigated. As shown
305
in Figure 5b, at all tested Pi concentrations, the initial rate did not vary, indicative of unanimous
306
zero order kinetic behavior. This result further demonstrated that polyP synthesis in CPP directly
307
depended on in vivo ATP flux through the polyP synthetic pathway rather than exogenous Pi.
308
However, given that one phosphoric acid radical of ATP is deprived by PPK1 for polyP synthesis,
309
regeneration of in vivo ATP necessitated the uptake of exogenous Pi. For this reason, when
310
exogenous Pi was insufficient, CPP would totally deplete exogenous Pi and even could
311
experience an abrupt cessation of polyP synthesis (Figures S3b and 3c) and cellular growth
312
(Figure S4). This characteristic of CPP is very attractive, and it raises the intriguing application
313
perspective that it can achieve thorough Pi removal from wastewater at COD: P ≥ 18.
314
Pi Removal and Enrichment with Bench-scale SBMBR. Increasing concerns over global
315
phosphorus resource depletion together with more stringent phosphorus discharge limits make
316
the recovery of phosphorus from wastewater sensible and attractive.31 However, economically
317
feasible recovery generally requires a liquid phase with phosphorus concentrations of > 50 mg/L, 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 36
Page 19 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
318
which is not suitable for municipal wastewater (which usually has phosphorus concentrations of
319
< 10 mg/L). Thus, the enrichment of phosphorus from such inherently diluted waste streams is
320
essential for the subsequent phosphorus recovery.36 Therefore, as the last part of this study, we
321
sought to leverage the strengths of CPP to remove and concentrate Pi from SMW. Consistent
322
with the results from shake-flask tests, the in-reactor Pi was completely depleted within 4 h
323
(Figure 6b). Thereafter, practically Pi-free water was consistently obtained through continuous
324
withdrawal of the reactor supernatant until 0.02 mg/L Pi was detected in the permeate stream at
325
16 h. During this period, the Pi from 82 L of SMW was fully taken up by CPP and mainly
326
converted to a concentrated form (i.e., intracellular polyP) (Figure S5b). After membrane
327
concentration, 9 L of enriched CPP cell suspension was obtained and then subjected to Pi release
328
(Figure 6c inset). At the end of the Pi release phase, a cell suspension with supernatant Pi
329
concentrations of up to 62 mg-P/L was formed (Figure 6c); namely, Pi was effectively enriched
330
up to 8-fold. As confirmed by recovery efficiency calculation, almost all the Pi was successfully
331
concentrated apart from the portion assimilated by CPP (Text S3). These results suggest that
332
full-scale Pi removal and enrichment using CPP is technologically feasible.
333
Yet full exploitation of the environmental application of CPP will only be achieved if we can
334
better understand its potential advantages and disadvantages. Compared with conventional EBPR
335
processes, its advantages are: (1) no requirement of anaerobic pretreatment (efficient Pi removal
336
could be achieved fully aerobically in a single phase); 2) a favorable rate of throughput;37 and (3)
337
no dependence upon volatile fatty acid (VFA) concentrations (polyP accumulation in CPP is not 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
338
VFA-dependent based on the bioavailability of different carbon sources, Text S4 and Table S3).
339
The major disadvantages relative to PAO organisms that can use endogenous carbon sources
340
[mainly polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs)] for biomass growth and polyP accumulation is that Pi
341
removal and polyP production in CPP depends mainly on exogenous organic substrates. Under
342
these circumstances, CPP may face considerable competition with other aerobic microorganisms
343
for bio-assimilable substrates in a realistic wastewater treatment process setting where organic
344
matter type and concentrations are highly variable. Thus, these dynamics and carbon
345
requirements would affect the performance of CPP. Our ongoing research program is
346
investigating the possibility of these limitations and mechanisms to overcome them. More
347
specifically, we wish to initiate a pilot-scale trial of real municipal wastewater treatment to assess
348
Pi removal performance and economic viability because a carbon source, such as crude glycerol,
349
may need to be added and leverage the high phosphorus processing capacity of CPP to remove
350
and “refine” Pi from some wastewaters that generally contain high concentrations of mixed
351
organic matters. Examples of such situations are abattoir wastewater, poultry wastewater, and
352
soybean protein wastewater, where Pi is difficult to strip by chemical precipitation and
353
coagulation. Lastly, the biosafety aspects of CPP need to be further assessed because C. freundii
354
is an enterobacterium and may contribute to the propagation of environmental antimicrobial
355
resistance.38,39 Thus, more potentially safe environmental bacteria, such as Acinetobacter
356
calcoaceticus and Pseudomonas putida, should be further investigated using our framework, in
357
addition to other cultivars, as long as they are Gram-negative, culturable under aerobic 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 20 of 36
Page 21 of 36
358
Environmental Science & Technology
conditions, genetically accessible, and relatively harmless to human health.
359
Overall, our study demonstrates that practically optimum intracellular polyP production can
360
be easily achieved with C. freundii engineered based on a solo medium-copy plasmid strategy.
361
Moreover, this strategy takes into account cell yield at the same time because the medium-copy
362
plasmid would not impose appreciable metabolic burden upon the host cell, thanks to the
363
guidelines of metabolic engineering. More importantly, the engineered CPP constructed based on
364
this strategy could work for the first time in SMW, and exogenous Pi of low concentration could
365
be thoroughly removed and subsequently enriched, which raises the practical application
366
potential of this strategy. The strategy presented here is so simple and effective that it might be
367
extended to other environmental bacteria with different environment adaptabilities as long as
368
enhanced biological Pi removal and/or enrichment is desired in various wastewater treatment
369
processes.
370 371
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
372
Supporting Information
373
Additional materials and methods, Pi recovery efficiency calculation and experimental data
374
(Texts S1-S4, Tables S1-S2 and Figures S1-S5). This material is available free of charge via the
375
Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
376 19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
377
AUTHOR INFORMATION
378
Corresponding Author
379
*
380
Notes
381
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Phone: +86 25 8968 0257; E-mail:
[email protected] 382 383
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
384
This work was supported by the National Special Program of Water Environment
385
(2017ZX07204).
386 387
REFERENCES
388
(1)
389 390
Brown, M. R.; Kornberg, A. Inorganic polyphosphate in the origin and survival of species. P. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2004, 101 (46), 16085-16087.
(2)
391
Brown, M. R.; Kornberg, A. The long and short of it–polyphosphate, PPK and bacterial survival. Trends Biochem. Sci. 2008, 33 (6), 284-290.
392
(3) Akiyama, M.; Crooke, E.; Kornberg, A. The polyphosphate kinase gene of Escherichia coli.
393
Isolation and sequence of the ppk gene and membrane location of the protein. J. Biol. Chem.
394
1992, 267 (31), 22556-22561.
395 396
(4)
McGrath, J. W.; Quinn, J. P. Intracellular accumulation of polyphosphate by the yeast Candida humicola G-1 in response to acid pH. Appl. Environ. Microb. 2000, 66 (9), 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 36
Page 23 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
397 398
4068-4073. (5)
399 400
biological phosphate removal process. Water Res. 1998, 32 (11), 3193-3207. (6)
401 402
Mino, T.; Van Loosdrecht, M.; Heijnen, J. Microbiology and biochemistry of the enhanced
McGrath, J. W.; Quinn, J. P. Microbial phosphate removal and polyphosphate production from wastewaters. Adv. Appl. Microbiol. 2003, 52, 75-100.
(7)
Kato, J.; Yamada, K.; Muramatsu, A.; Ohtake, H. Genetic improvement of Escherichia coli
403
for enhanced biological removal of phosphate from wastewater. Appl. Environ. Microb.
404
1993, 59 (11), 3744-3749.
405
(8)
Yamada, K.; Shinjo, H.; Kato, J.; Ohtake, H. Production and release of polyphosphate by a
406
genetically engineered strain of Escherichia coli. Appl. Environ. Microb. 1994, 60 (10),
407
3485-3490.
408
(9)
Morohoshi, T.; Maruo, T.; Shirai, Y.; Kato, J.; Ikeda, T.; Takiguchi, N.; Ohtake, H.; Kuroda,
409
A. Accumulation of inorganic polyphosphate in phoU mutants of Escherichia coli and
410
Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803. Appl. Environ. Microb. 2002, 68 (8), 4107-4110.
411
(10) Morohoshi, T.; Yamashita, T.; Kato, J.; Ikeda, T.; Takiguchi, N.; Ohtake, H.; Kuroda, A. A
412
method for screening remove polyphosphate-accumulating mutants which remove
413
phosphate efficiently from synthetic wastewater. J. Biosci. Bioeng. 2003, 95 (6), 637-640.
414
(11) Hirota, R.; Motomura, K.; Nakai, S.; Handa, T.; Ikeda, T.; Kuroda, A. Stable polyphosphate
415
accumulation by a pseudo-revertant of an Escherichia coli phoU mutant. Biotechnol. Lett.
416
2013, 35 (5), 695-701. 21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 24 of 36
417
(12) Jones, K. L.; Kim, S.-W.; Keasling, J. Low-copy plasmids can perform as well as or better
418
than high-copy plasmids for metabolic engineering of bacteria. Metab. Eng. 2000, 2 (4),
419
328-338.
420
(13) Liang, M. Z.; Frank, S.; Lünsdorf, H.; Warren, M. J.; Prentice, M. B. Bacterial
421
microcompartment‐directed
422
accumulation in E. coli. Biotechnol. J. 2017, 12, (3).
423 424 425 426
polyphosphate
kinase
promotes
stable
polyphosphate
(14) Keasling, J. D. Manufacturing molecules through metabolic engineering. Science 2010, 330 (6009), 1355-1358. (15) Lechner, A.; Brunk, E.; Keasling, J. D. The need for integrated approaches in metabolic engineering. CSH Perspect. Biol. 2016, 8 (11), a023903.
427
(16) Birnbaum, S.; Bailey, J. Plasmid presence changes the relative levels of many host cell
428
proteins and ribosome components in recombinant Escherichia coli. Biotechnol. Bioeng.
429
1991, 37 (8), 736-745.
430
(17) Vind, J.; Sørensen, M. A.; Rasmussen, M. D.; Pedersen, S. Synthesis of proteins in
431
Escherichia coli is limited by the concentration of free ribosomes: expression from reporter
432
genes does not always reflect functional mRNA levels. J. Mol. Biol 1993, 231 (3), 678-688.
433
(18) Kovach, M. E.; Elzer, P. H.; Hill, D. S.; Robertson, G. T.; Farris, M. A.; Roop, R. M.;
434
Peterson, K. M. Four new derivatives of the broad-host-range cloning vector pBBR1MCS,
435
carrying different antibiotic-resistance cassettes. Gene 1995, 166 (1), 175-176.
436
(19) Wei, W.; Liu, X. Z.; Sun, P. Q.; Wang, X.; Zhu, H.; Hong, M.; Mao, Z.W.; Zhao, J. Simple 22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 25 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
437
whole-cell biodetection and bioremediation of heavy metals based on an engineered
438
lead-specific operon. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2014, 48 (6), 3363-3371.
439
(20) Ault-Riché, D.; Fraley, C. D.; Tzeng, C. M.; Kornberg, A. Novel assay reveals multiple
440
pathways regulating stress-induced accumulations of inorganic polyphosphate in
441
Escherichia coli. J. Bacterial. 1998, 180 (7), 1841-1847.
442
(21) Bassin, J.; Kleerebezem, R.; Rosado, A.; van Loosdrecht, M. M.; Dezotti, M. Effect of
443
different operational conditions on biofilm development, nitrification, and nitrifying
444
microbial population in moving-bed biofilm reactors. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46 (3),
445
1546-1555.
446
(22) Federation, W. E.; Association, A. P. H. Standard methods for the examination of water and
447
wastewater. American Public Health Association (APHA): Washington, DC, USA 2005.
448
(23) Kulakova, A. N.; Hobbs, D.; Smithen, M.; Pavlov, E.; Gilbert, J. A.; Quinn, J. P.; McGrath,
449
J. W. Direct quantification of inorganic polyphosphate in microbial cells using
450
4′-6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Environ. Sci. Technol. 2011, 45 (18), 7799-7803.
451
(24) Gray, M. J.; Wholey, W. Y.; Wagner, N. O.; Cremers, C. M.; Mueller-Schickert, A.; Hock,
452
N. T.; Krieger, A. G.; Smith, E. M.; Bender, R. A.; Bardwell, J. C. Polyphosphate is a
453
primordial chaperone. Mol. Cell 2014, 53 (5), 689-699.
454 455 456
(25) Laybourn, R. L. A modification of Albert's stain for the diphtheria bacillus. J. Am. Med. Assoc. 1924, 83 (2), 121-121. (26) Aschar-Sobbi, R.; Abramov, A. Y.; Diao, C.; Kargacin, M. E.; Kargacin, G. J.; French, R. J.; 23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
457
Pavlov, E. High sensitivity, quantitative measurements of polyphosphate using a new
458
DAPI-based approach. J. Fluoresc. 2008, 18 (5), 859-866.
459
(27) Kumar, S.; Kaur, C.; Kimura, K.; Takeo, M.; Raghava, G. P. S.; Mayilraj, S. Draft genome
460
sequence of the type species of the genus Citrobacter, Citrobacter freundii MTCC 1658.
461
Genome A. 2013, 1 (1), e00120-12.
462
(28) Mullan, A.; Quinn, J.; McGrath, J. Enhanced phosphate uptake and polyphosphate
463
accumulation in Burkholderia cepacia grown under low-pH conditions. Microb. Ecol. 2002,
464
44 (1), 69-77.
465
(29) Van Dien, S. J.; Keyhani, S.; Yang, C.; Keasling, J. Manipulation of independent synthesis
466
and degradation of polyphosphate in Escherichia coli for investigation of phosphate
467
secretion from the cell. Appl. Environ. Microb. 1997, 63 (5), 1689-1695.
468
(30) Pramanik, J.; Keasling, J. Stoichiometric model of Escherichia coli metabolism:
469
incorporation of growth‐rate dependent biomass composition and mechanistic energy
470
requirements. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 1997, 56 (4), 398-421.
471 472
(31) Yuan, Z.; Pratt, S.; Batstone, D. J. Phosphorus recovery from wastewater through microbial processes. Curr. Opin. Biotech. 2012, 23 (6), 878-883.
473
(32) Kuroda, A.; Nomura, K.; Ohtomo, R.; Kato, J.; Ikeda, T.; Takiguchi, N.; Ohtake, H.;
474
Kornberg, A. Role of inorganic polyphosphate in promoting ribosomal protein degradation
475
by the Lon protease in E. coli. Science 2001, 293 (5530), 705-708.
476
(33) Stante, L.; Cellamare, C.; Malaspina, F.; Bortone, G.; Tilche, A. Biological phosphorus 24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 36
Page 27 of 36
477
Environmental Science & Technology
removal by pure culture of Lampropedia spp. Water Res. 1997, 31 (6), 1317-1324.
478
(34) Santos, M. M.; Lemos, P. C.; Reis, M. A.; Santos, H. Glucose metabolism and kinetics of
479
phosphorus removal by the fermentative bacterium Microlunatus phosphovorus. Appl.
480
Environ. Microb. 1999, 65 (9), 3920-3928.
481
(35) Majed, N.; Matthäus, C.; Diem, M.; Gu, A. Z. Evaluation of intracellular polyphosphate
482
dynamics in enhanced biological phosphorus removal process using Raman microscopy.
483
Environ. Sci. Technol. 2009, 43 (14), 5436-5442.
484
(36) Desmidt, E.; Ghyselbrecht, K.; Zhang, Y.; Pinoy, L.; Van der Bruggen, B.; Verstraete, W.;
485
Rabaey, K.; Meesschaert, B. Global phosphorus scarcity and full-scale P-recovery
486
techniques: a review. Crit. Rev. Env. Sci. Tec. 2015, 45 (4), 336-384.
487
(37) Mullan, A.; McGrath, J. W.; Adamson, T.; Irwin, S.; Quinn, J. P. Pilot-scale evaluation of
488
the application of low pH-inducible polyphosphate accumulation to the biological removal
489
of phosphate from wastewaters. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2006, 40 (1), 296-301.
490
(38) Pruden, A.; Pei, R.; Storteboom, H.; Carlson, K. H. Antibiotic resistance genes as emerging
491
contaminants: studies in northern Colorado. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2006, 40 (23),
492
7445-7450.
493 494
(39) Pruden, A. Balancing water sustainability and public health goals in the face of growing concerns about antibiotic resistance. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2014, 48 (1), 5-14.
495
25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
496
Figure and Table Captions
497
Figure 1. Intracellular polyP content (a), supernatant Pi concentration (b), and optical density (c)
498
of CPP grown in SMW compared with CPR or CWT. The left segment of the time axes
499
represents the polyP synthesis stage (also called Pi uptake stage), whereas the right
500
segment represents the polyP degradation stage (also called Pi release stage). The inset
501
in Figure 1c indicates the maximal optical density of each strain cultured using LB
502
medium. The values of the bars with different letters on the top are significantly
503
different (t test, p < 0.05) from each other. Data are representative of three independent
504
experiments, and error bars correspond to the standard deviation (i.e., mean ± s.d., n =
505
3).
506
Figure 2. qRT-PCR analysis of plasmid-borne ppk1 expression in CPP and CPR sampled from
507
either LB medium or SMW; results are presented relative to the average expression
508
level of native ppk1 determined from CWT, set as 1. In the inoculum, ppk1 expression
509
levels determined from LB samples at 12 h also represent the initial (0 h) ppk1
510
expression levels of each strain in SMW. The inset is a photograph of concentrated
511
cells (harvested by centrifugation from 200 mL SMW and resuspended in 4 mL
512
deionized water) of each strain. RFP was significantly expressed and can be visualized
513
by the naked eye. The values of the bars with different letters on the top are
514
significantly different (t test, p < 0.05) from each other. Data are the mean ± s.d. (n =
515
3). 26 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 28 of 36
Page 29 of 36
516 517
Environmental Science & Technology
Figure 3. In vivo ATP levels of each strain grown in SMW as a function of OD600. Data are the mean ± s.d. (n = 3).
518
Figure 4. (a) Light microscopy images of Albert stained cells (malachite green and toluidine blue;
519
polyP granules appear purple-black and polyP free cells appear blue-green). Dashed
520
frame: gradually increasing intracellular polyP inclusions in CPP with time. Solid-line
521
frame: comparison of intracellular polyP inclusions in three strains sampled at 15 h.
522
Scale bars are 5 µm. (b) Corresponding to the light microscopy images in the solid-line
523
frame. Confocal laser scanning microscopy images of three strains as obtained via
524
different channels (DAPI-DNA: 403 nm laser, filter bandpass = 425-475 nm;
525
DAPI-polyP: 403 nm laser, filter bandpass = 552-617 nm; RFP: 543 nm laser, filter
526
bandpass = 552-617 nm; Overlay: combined images of three channels). Scale bars are
527
2 µm.
528
Figure 5. (a) Variation of intracellular polyP content in CPR and CPP with time during the Pi
529
uptake stage in SMW. (b) Relationship between intracellular polyP synthesis rate of
530
CPP and exogenous Pi concentration in SMW. See also Figure S3. Data are the mean ±
531
s.d. (n = 3).
532
Figure 6. (a) Photograph of the MBR. (b) Variation of Pi concentration and in-reactor cell
533
density with operation time. The arrow indicates the time period of feeding and
534
withdrawal. Pi concentrations before 4 h were determined from the supernatant of the
535
in-reactor cell suspension. Pi concentrations after 4 h were determined from the 27 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
536
effluent. (c) Variation of supernatant Pi concentration of enriched sludge with time.
537
The inset shows the sludge withdrawal vessel for Pi concentration. Data shown are the
538
averages of two measurements from a single cycle and are representative of three
539
cycles conducted similarly. Error bars are the standard deviation of the two
540
measurements.
541 542 543
Table 1. Comparison of TP content and Pi removal of different strains engineered based on a solo medium-copy plasmid strategy versus three other strategies.
544
28 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 30 of 36
Page 31 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
545
546 547
Figure 1
548
549 550
Figure 2
551 552
29 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
553 554
Figure 3
555
30 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 32 of 36
Page 33 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
556 557
Figure 4
558
31 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
559 560
Figure 5
561
562 563
Figure 6
32 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 34 of 36
Page 35 of 36
Environmental Science & Technology
564
Table 1
Host cell E. coli MV1184 C. freundii ATCC 8090 E. coli MV1184 C. freundii ATCC 8090 E. coli BL21(DE3) E. coli MV1184 E. coli DH10B
TP content
Pi removal
(mg-P/g-DW)
(mg-P/L)
OD600
COD
Plasmid
(mg/L)
(copy number)
b
160
8
0.20
2400
140
19
0.52
350
67a
12
0.60
2400b
54 a
7
0.54
pBC29c (500-700)d pEP02.2 (10-12)d pBBR1MCS2c (15-20)d pEP03c (500-700)d pBBR1MCS2c (15-20)d
350
simple19T (500-700)d b
pML001c (15-20)d
38
9
0.80
3000
26a
6
0.78
2400b
pBC29c (500-700)d
25
/
2.50
3600b
pF12c (1-2)d
d
pLysS (10-12)
Strategy category dual plasmid (high & medium)
Ref
7
solo
this
medium-copy
study
solo high-copy
7
dual plasmid
this
(high & medium)
study
dual plasmid (dual medium) solo high-copy solo low-copy
13
7
12
565 566
a
567
equals 0.3 g-DW/L.12
Data were calculated based on the values of Pi removal and OD600 using the equation TP = (Pi removal × 1L)/(OD600 × 0.3× 1L), where OD600 ~ 1
33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
568
b
569
the original references.
570
c
Plasmids that were used to express PPK1.
571
d
Copy number of each plasmid, which was estimated based on Qiagen literature resource: Origin of replication and copy number of various plasmids and
572
cosmids (https://www.qiagen.com).
Values are the starting COD in the medium rather than that consumed by the bacteria because the absolute consumption values were not available from
34 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 36 of 36