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Identification of anaerobic aniline-degrading bacteria at a contaminated industrial site Weimin Sun, Yun Li, Lora McGuinness, Shuai Luo, Weilin Huang, Lee Kerkhof, Elizabeth Erin Mack, Max M. Haggblom, and Donna E Fennell Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b02166 • Publication Date (Web): 17 Aug 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 23, 2015
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Identification of anaerobic aniline-degrading bacteria at a contaminated industrial site
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Weimin Sun1,2, Yun Li1, Lora R. McGuinness3, Shuai Luo1, Weilin Huang1, Lee J. Kerkhof3, E. Erin
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Mack4, Max M. Häggblom2, and Donna E. Fennell1*
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1
Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA
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2
Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA
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3
DepartmentofMarine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA
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4
DuPont, Corporate Remediation Group, Wilmington, DE, USA
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*Corresponding author
12
14 College Farm Road
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New Brunswick, NJ 08901
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Office: +01-848-932-5748
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Email:
[email protected] 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29
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Abstract: Anaerobic aniline biodegradation was investigated under different
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electron-accepting conditions using contaminated canal and groundwater aquifer
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sediments from an industrial site. Aniline loss was observed in nitrate- and
33
sulfate-amended
34
methanogenic conditions. Lag times of 37 days (sulfate amended) to more than 100
35
days (methanogenic) were observed prior to activity. Time-series DNA-stable isotope
36
probing (SIP) was used to identify bacteria that incorporated 13C-labeled aniline in the
37
microcosms established to promote methanogenic conditions. In microcosms from
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heavily contaminated aquifer sediments, a phylotype with 92.7% sequence similarity
39
to Ignavibacterium album was identified as a dominant aniline degrader as indicated
40
by incorporation of 13C-aniline into its DNA. In microcosms from contaminated canal
41
sediments, a bacterial phylotype within the family Anaerolineaceae, but without a
42
match to any known genus, demonstrated the assimilation of 13C-aniline. Acidovorax
43
spp. were also identified as putative aniline degraders in both of these two treatments,
44
indicating that these species were present and active in both the canal and aquifer
45
sediments. There were multiple bacterial phylotypes associated with anaerobic
46
degradation of aniline at this complex industrial site, which suggests that anaerobic
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transformation of aniline is an important process at the site. Furthermore, the aniline
48
degrading phylotypes identified in the current study are not related to any known
49
aniline-degrading bacteria.
50
expands current knowledge regarding the potential fate of aniline under anaerobic
51
conditions.
microcosms
and
in
microcosms
established
to
promote
The identification of novel putative aniline degraders
52 53
Key
words:
anaerobic
aniline
degradation,
54
Anaerolineaceae, stable isotope probing
Ignavibacterium,
Acidovorax,
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Introduction Aniline is a basic industrial chemical for production of dyes, pesticides and
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pharmaceutical compounds, and is a pollutant commonly detected in soils and
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groundwater 1. Aniline is considered as a potential carcinogen2 and is toxic to human
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and aquatic life3, 4. Aniline enters the environment from releases during chemical
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manufacturing5, by the use of crude/synthetic oils and coal-based fuels6, and via
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biodegradation of pesticides in soils7, 8. Accidental spillage remains an important
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source of aniline contamination to the environment. Recently, two massive aniline
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spills occurred in northern China that posed health risks to exposed populations. The
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Tianji coal chemical industry chemical spill of 20129 introduced more than 39 tons of
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aniline into the Zhuozhang River and caused a water crisis for more than a million
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people living in downstream cities. In early 2013, aniline leaked into the water supply
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of a village in Hebei province, China and killed at least 700 chickens10. Aniline
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contamination may remain as an environmental threat because global aniline
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consumption grew by 3% annually between 2006–2010, and by nearly 10% per year
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from 2010 to 201211. Therefore, it is important to understand the fate of aniline in the
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environment.
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The removal of aniline from contaminated aquifers, sediments and wastewater has
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been attempted by both biological and abiological means12-14. Biodegradation of
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aniline is an important remedial process in soil and aquatic environments13 and has
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been observed over several decades14-19. Current understanding of aniline
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biodegradation pathways come primarily from pure isolates or defined consortia
78
grown under aerobic conditions20-23. Information about aniline degradation by bacteria
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in anoxic environments is rather limited. Aniline loss under denitrifying conditions
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has been reported in aquatic sediments and digester sludge24, anoxic reactors25, and 3
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inflow columns26. Aniline degradation was also observed under Fe(III)-reducing
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conditions in river sediments27. In contrast, aniline concentrations remained
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unchanged for more than 200 days under methanogenic conditions in sediments and
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digester sludge24. Further, few anaerobic aniline-degrading bacteria have been
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identified. In 1989, Desulfobacterium anilini was isolated from marine sediment with
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aniline as the sole carbon source and sulfate as the electron acceptor28 and its
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degradation pathway was characterized29. Later, strain HY99, an aerobic aniline
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degrader phylogenetically similar to Delftia acidovorans, was reported to degrade
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aniline under both aerobic and nitrate-reducing conditions30. Unfortunately, our
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current understanding of anaerobic aniline biodegradation is based entirely on these
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limited studies.
92 93
In the current study, microcosms established from aniline-contaminated canal and
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groundwater aquifer sediments were used to examine aniline biodegradation under
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anoxic conditions where nitrate, sulfate, or CO2 was added. In addition, we used
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DNA-SIP with
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taxa that were able to incorporate
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results indicated that members of Ignavibacterium, Anaerolineaceae, and Acidovorax
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were associated with anaerobic degradation of aniline. These findings suggest that
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anaerobic transformation of aniline can be an important process and could be used to
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enhance bioremediation of aniline in contaminated sites.
13
C-labeled aniline to discern the phylogenetic identity of bacterial 13
C carbons from aniline into their DNA. The
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Materials and Methods
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Contaminated site description
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The study site is a chemical manufacturing facility in continuous operation since the
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mid-1890s located along the Delaware River in southern New Jersey, USA. The site is
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contaminated
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monochlorobenzene, dichlorobenzene, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and
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dyes as described previously31-33. Aniline concentrations at the site ranged from 0.06
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to 660 µM (6 to 61,000 µg/L), according to historical sampling data. Samples were
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taken from four different locations at the site as shown in Figure 1. The first location
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is a heavily contaminated groundwater (HCGW) aquifer with aniline concentrations
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exceeding 530 µM (50,000 µg/L). Geochemistry of the groundwater near the HCGW
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location included: neutral pH, alkalinity, 275 to 400 mg/L; dissolved oxygen (DO) < 2
115
mg/L; nitrate not detected; methane, 14,000 µg/L; and sulfate, 125 to 150 mg/L. The
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second location is a lightly contaminated groundwater (LCGW) aquifer.
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Geochemistry of the groundwater near the LCGW location included: pH, 6.1 to 6.8;
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alkalinity 40 to 50 mg/L; DO < 5 mg/L; nitrate < 1 mg/L; methane, 50 to 220 µg/L;
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and sulfate, 20 to 40 mg/L. Two other site locations are from a freshwater canal with
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heavily contaminated canal sediments (HCFW) adjacent to the contaminated aquifer
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and lightly contaminated canal sediments (LCFW) upstream of the contaminated
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aquifer. Monitoring wells screened in the canal sediments indicated: neutral pH;
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alkalinity 275 to 400 mg/L; DO < 1 mg/L; nitrate not detected; methane, 3400 to 6900
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µg/L; and sulfate, 72 to 210 mg/L. Sediment cores were obtained from each location
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and were cut, capped and labeled in the field prior to shipment to Rutgers University
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on ice. Specifically, aquifer cores of 0.9 m × 0.04 m diameter from 0 to 3 m below
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ground surface were obtained from LCGW and HCGW; and sediment cores of 1.5 m
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× 0.08 m diameter were obtained from LCFW and HCFW. Groundwater and canal
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water was also obtained from each location at the time of sampling. Core materials
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(saturated zone only for LCGW and HCGW) were composited in a disposable
with
mixtures
of
different
chemicals
including
aniline,
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glovebag under a sterile nitrogen purge and stored in sterile glass jars before
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dispensing into microcosms. All materials were stored at 4 °C until use.
133 134
Set up of sediment microcosms
135
Sediment microcosms were established under anoxic conditions in triplicate with a
136
total volume of 100 mL (with 20 g sediment and balance of the volume canal water or
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groundwater) under a headspace of N2/CO2 (70:30 vol/vol). [The microcosm study is
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described in detail by Li, 201434 and is also briefly described in the Supporting
139
Information.] Twelve treatments were established as shown in Table S1. Briefly,
140
treatments amended with Na2SO4 (20 mM) (denoted S) and KNO3 (30 mM) (denoted
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N) were established to promote sulfate-reducing and nitrate-reducing conditions,
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respectively, while treatments amended with CO2 were intended to promote
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methanogenic conditions (denoted M). Microcosms were amended with aniline
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(Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, USA) and monitored for 1400 days. Aniline was initially
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spiked to a concentration of 100 µM in stage 1 from day 0 to 340; and to a
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concentration of 1500 µM during stage 2 from day 340 to 1400. The increase of
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aniline concentration was implemented to increase the selective pressure on the
148
sediment communities.
149 150
Microcosms for SIP
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Microcosms from treatments established to promote methanogenic conditions and
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showing substantial loss of aniline, i.e., HCGW-M and LCFW-M, were selected as
153
parent microcosms to set up daughter microcosms for SIP analysis (see Table S2).
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Briefly, 20 mL slurry from parent microcosms was transferred to 60 mL serum bottles
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and mixed with 20 mL groundwater or canal water in an anaerobic chamber (Coy
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Laboratory Products Inc., Grass Lake, USA). Triplicate cultures were amended with
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either 0.3 to 0.4 mM uniformly labeled 13C-aniline (Cambridge Isotope Laboratories,
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Inc. Andover, MA, USA) or 12C-aniline (Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, USA).
159 160
Analytical techniques
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Sediment slurry (1 mL each for aniline and ion analyses) was removed from
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microcosms using sterile syringes flushed with sterile N2/CO2. The sediment slurry
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was then extracted with 1 mL acetonitrile and filtered extracts were analyzed using an
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Agilent 1100 high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system (Agilent,
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Santa Clara, USA). Nitrate and sulfate were analyzed in filtered, supernatant diluted
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20-fold using an ICS-1000 ion chromatograph (Dionex, Sunnyvale, USA). Headspace
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samples (250 µL) were analyzed for methane content using a gas chromatography
168
system (Agilent 6890N G1530N network GC system) with flame ionization detection.
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Additional details for aniline and methane measurements are provided in the
170
Supporting Information.
171 172
Molecular analyses
173
For
174
extraction at two different time points (an early time point, T1 (21 days) and a later
175
time point, T2 (48 days)) during aniline depletion. For unlabeled aniline treatments,
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DNA was extracted only at one time point during aniline depletion, denoted as T3.
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The amount of aniline that had been consumed by T1 and T2 varied for each
178
treatment as shown in Table S2.
13
C-labeled aniline treatments, one replicate microcosm was sampled for DNA
179 180
Total genomic DNA was extracted from ~0.25 g sediment slurry using the PowerSoil
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DNA extraction kit (MO BIO Laboratories, Inc. Carlsbad, USA) based on the
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manufacturer’s protocol. Purified DNA (~300 ng) was subjected to cesium chloride
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(CsCl) isopycnal centrifugation (225,000 g for 48 h) after mixing with 100 ng of
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archaeal (Halobacterium salinarum) DNA as described previously35-37. After
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ultracentrifugation, two DNA bands were observed, i.e. a
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genomic DNA from the resident microbial community and a
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containing newly synthesized DNA from active microorganisms assimilating
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aniline. The
189
DNA fractions for each
190
(5’-AGAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG, 5’ end-labeled with carboxyfluorescine) and
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1100R (5’-AGGGTTGCGCTCGTTG) (Sigma Aldrich, St. Louis, USA) for
192
generating bacterial amplicons for TRFLP analysis. Fifteen ng PCR product was
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digested with MnlI endonuclease (New England Biolab, Beverly, USA). All digests
194
were performed in 20 µL for 6 h at 37°C. Precipitation of digested DNA was
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performed as described previously38. T-RFLP fingerprinting was carried out on an
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ABI 310 genetic analyzer (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, USA) using Genescan
197
software.
12
12
C band (top) containing 13
C band (bottom)
C and 13C-DNA bands were collected by pipette35, 37. The 12C and treatment
13
C
13
C
were PCR-amplified using 27F-FAM
198 13
199
To identify the main T-RFs, clone libraries were generated from
C bacterial SSU
200
amplicons derived from DNA extracted at T2. For detailed information regarding
201
cloning and sequencing, please refer to the Supporting Information. The Ribosomal
202
Database Project (RDP) Classifier analysis tool was utilized to assign taxonomic
203
identity. Phylogenetic trees for the partial 16S rRNA gene sequences along with the
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closest matches in Genbank were obtained by the neighbor-joining method using
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MEGA 5.0 software. The 16S rRNA gene sequences were deposited with GenBank
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under accession numbers KP682336-KP682352.
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Results and Discussion
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Long-term monitoring of aniline biodegradation
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Aniline loss without a lag was observed in microcosms LCGW-N, LCFW-N and
211
HCFW-N under nitrate-amended conditions (Figure S1). No aniline loss was observed
212
in HCGW-N. Loss of nitrate was observed in microcosms concomitant with the loss
213
of aniline (Figure S2). In contrast to nitrate-amended microcosms, sulfate-amended
214
and methanogenic microcosms experienced a longer lag time before aniline loss was
215
observed (Figure 2). In addition, some replicates behaved differently despite being set
216
up at the same time and identical conditions. Depletion of aniline was observed in
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LCGW-S and LCFW-S. Substantial loss of aniline occurred in one of the triplicate
218
HCGW-S microcosms after 300 days, but no aniline loss was observed in the other
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two replicates. Substantial loss of aniline was observed in all killed microcosms from
220
HCFW, likely indicating sorption to sediment. Therefore,it was difficult to determine
221
whether aniline loss could be attributed to biodegradation in HCFW-S.
222 223
To examine whether aniline loss was coupled to reduction of the electron acceptors
224
under each condition, predicted values of electron donor loss based on stoichiometric
225
equations (excluding cellular yield) were computed to compare to those measured in
226
aniline-degrading microcosms. The comparison between predicted values and actual
227
values of selected treatments is summarized in Table S4. Most treatments, with the
228
exception of HCFW-S, consumed more nitrate and sulfate than predicted, indicating
229
that natural organic matter in the sediment, or perhaps other contaminants, in addition
230
to aniline, were also consumed. Actual methane production was larger than predicted
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values for HCGW-M (Table S4), indicating that carbon sources other than aniline
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contributed to methane production. Methane detected in microcosms under all redox
233
conditions is shown in Table S5. In general when nitrate or sulfate was present, there
234
was little methane production indicating that methanogens were outcompeted under
235
these conditions.
236 237
Loss of aniline was observed in methanogenic microcosms. All triplicate microcosms
238
from HCGW-M and LCFW-M demonstrated aniline depletion after more than 200
239
days incubation. LCFW-M was the most active treatment with repeated loss of aniline
240
upon re-amendment. All triplicates from HCGW-M demonstrated aniline loss during
241
stage 1. It is noteworthy that similar losses (e.g. similar lag period) of aniline in live
242
and killed microcosms were also observed in HCFW-M, indicating aniline loss may
243
not be wholly attributable to biodegradation in that system. In LCGW-M and
244
HCFW-M aniline depletion was observed in only one replicate but the remaining live
245
microcosms did not show substantial aniline loss.
246 247
Degradation of aniline under conditions established to promote methanogenesis
248
occurred most readily at HCGW, LCFW and HCFW (Table S3). Geochemical data
249
indicated that the highest concentrations of methane were detected at the HCGW
250
(14,000 µg/L), and LCFW and HCFW sites (3,400-6,900 µg/L), indicating that these
251
locations are more reduced. In contrast, the LCGW site had lower methane (50 to 220
252
µg/L) and was likely less reduced. In contrast, aniline degradation under
253
nitrate-amended conditions did not occur at HCGW.
254
loss under sulfate-amended conditions, however for HCGW, only one replicate
255
showed activity.
All locations exhibited aniline
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At stage 2, increased aniline loading (1500 µM) may have had some detrimental
257
effect on aniline biodegradation. As shown in Table S4, a comparison between aniline
258
loss in stage 1 and stage 2 clearly demonstrated that some microcosms showing
259
aniline loss in stage 1 at lower aniline concentrations did not exhibit aniline loss at
260
stage 2 when higher aniline concentrations were imposed. All triplicates from
261
HCGW-M showed aniline loss at stage 1 but only one microcosm showed aniline loss
262
at stage 2. However, microcosms from LCFW demonstrated a consistent degradation
263
pattern. All triplicates in LCFW-N, LCFW-S, and LCFW-M showed aniline loss at
264
both stage 1 and stage 2. The inhibition of aniline biodegradation by increased aniline
265
loading could be challenging for remediation of extensive aniline spills, which may
266
involve high environmental concentrations.
267 268
Aniline biodegradation under nitrate-reducing conditions was reported in previous
269
studies30. Our current observation confirmed that substantial and rapid aniline loss
270
was observed in all nitrate-amended treatments except HCGW-N, suggesting that
271
aniline might be readily degradable under nitrate-reducing conditions at these sites.
272
Substantial aniline loss was also observed in two sulfate-amended treatments
273
(LCGW-S and LCFW-S). It is notable that decrease in sulfate concentration was also
274
observed in these two treatments (Figure 3), indicating the aniline loss may be
275
coupled to sulfate reduction. Substantial aniline loss was observed in two locations for
276
the methanogenic treatments, HCGW-M and LCFW-M. Methanogenic treatments
277
LCGW-M, LCFW-M, and HCFW-M exhibited substantial methane production,
278
indicating that methanogenic conditions were indeed established, however, HCGW-M
279
did not produce substantial methane (Table S4 and S5). Overall, long-term monitoring
280
indicated that aniline was depleted under a variety of redox conditions, even under
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methanogenic conditions, in contrast to prior reports in anaerobic sludge and estuarine
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sediment24. The most rapid degradation rates observed for aniline under the different
283
redox conditions are shown in Table S6. The observation that aniline biodegradation
284
did not occur at all sites or in all replicates under methanogenic conditions, and that
285
long incubation periods were sometimes required, suggests that the microbes
286
responsible for this activity may have been present at lower abundances in the
287
composited sediments than those that were active under the nitrate-amended
288
conditions.
289 290
Stable isotope probing of two anaerobic aniline-degrading treatments
291
Since information is currently lacking regarding aniline degradation under
292
methanogenic conditions, we selected two active treatments that were intended to
293
promote methanogenic conditions (HCGW-M and LCFW-M) for SIP analysis.
294
Daughter microcosms seeded from HCGW-M and LCFW-M, denoted GW-M and
295
FW-M, respectively, demonstrated aniline loss after re-amendment of aniline (Figure
296
S3). However, only FW-M generated substantial methane during SIP incubation
297
(Figure S3). Consistent with long-term monitoring of the original microcosms, GW-M
298
did not produce substantial amounts of methane. Thus GW-M cannot be explicitly
299
referred to as methanogenic but was an anoxic treatment that was amended with no
300
electron acceptors (other than CO2).
301 302
Identification of anaerobic aniline-degrading bacteria
303
The incorporation of
304
T-RFs enriched in
305
carbon source by bacteria in the enrichment cultures. No T-RFs were observed in
13
C-labeled aniline into DNA as evidenced from a number of
13
C-DNA fractions confirms that aniline was being utilized as a
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13
307
minimize the effect of cross-feeding in our study, we performed SIP at two time
308
points, T1 and T2. T1 represents an early biodegradation time point, while T2
309
represents a time point when ~50% aniline was degraded. No obvious differences
310
were observed in TRFLP profiles derived from 13C-fractions at the two time points for
311
GW-M and FW-M, indicating that bacteria assimilating labeled carbons were similar
312
at early and middle stages of biodegradation.
C-DNA fractions of corresponding
12
C-aniline amended controls (Figure S4). To
313 13
314
The clone library retrieved from the
C-fraction of GW-M (135 clones) was
315
dominated by the phyla Chlorobi (37%) and Betaproteobacteria (40%). In addition,
316
Actinobacteria (7%), Firmicutes (7%) and Deltaproteobacteria (6%) were also
317
present in the clone library at a relatively small proportion (Table 1). In FW-M, 150
318
bacterial clones were screened from the 13C-DNA fraction and eight OTUs detected in
319
the 13C-fraction were identified in the clone library. As in GW-M, members of phylum
320
Betaproteobacteria (50%) were predominant in FW-M. However, unlike GW-M, the
321
Chloroflexi (29%) were predominant while the Chlorobi were not present in large
322
numbers in the library derived from FW-M.
323 324
Analysis of the 13C TRFLP profiles demonstrated similarities and differences between
325
the two microcosms. In GW-M, two T-RFs, 239 bp and 274 bp, were dominant in
326
13
327
239 bp T-RF was unique to the GW-M microcosms and was solely enriched in
328
13
329
12
330
profiles indicated that several bacteria were associated with assimilation of 13C-aniline
C-DNA TRFLP profiles with relative abundances greater than 20% (Figure S5). The
C-DNA fractions, whereas the 274 bp T-RF showed high abundance in both 13C- and C-DNA fractions. The enrichment of multiple T-RFs in the
13
C-DNA TRFLP
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derived
carbon
under
methanogenic
332
Betaproteobacteria, and Chlorobi.
conditions
including
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Chloroflexi,
333 334
The 239 bp T-RF unique to GW-M was identified as a phylotype within the genus
335
Ignavibacterium39. The Ignavibacterium-related phylotypes identified in this study
336
were most closely related to two cultivated strains, i.e., 92.7% sequence similarity to
337
Ignavibacterium album (CP003418) and 87.5% sequence similarity to Melioribacter
338
roseus (CP003557), a low level of similarity. The genus Ignavibacterium branches
339
deeply in the phylum Chlorobi. Ignavibacterium album is a strictly anaerobic,
340
moderately thermophilic, neutrophilic and obligately heterotrophic bacterium39.
341
Genomic analysis revealed that I. album is a chemoheterotroph with a versatile
342
metabolism, suggesting that it could live under oxic and anoxic conditions because of
343
the presence of genes encoding oxidases and reductases40. Another closely related
344
cultivated isolate, Melioribacter roseus, is a facultatively anaerobic and obligately
345
organotrophic bacterium which was isolated from a microbial mat from a deep oil
346
exploration well. The Melioribacter strain grew on polysaccharides by aerobic
347
respiration or by reducing different electron acceptors41. Bacteria closely related to
348
Ignavibacterium were recently detected in a microbial enrichment established from
349
geothermal springs in Armenia42, in an anammox membrane bioreactor43, in microbial
350
fuel cells44, and in an upflow anaerobic sludge blanket reactor45. The ecological and
351
functional role of Ignavibacterium spp. in these natural and built habitats is still
352
unexplored. Our study is the first to indicate that members of Ignavibacterium may
353
have the potential to degrade aniline, suggesting a potential role for Ignavibacterium
354
in bioremediation.
355
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In FW-M, three T-RFs, 121 bp, 208bp and 274 bp, were enriched in the
C-DNA
357
TRFLP profiles (Figure 4). Bacterial phylotypes represented by the 121 bp T-RF
358
belonged to another poorly-classified bacterial lineage. The RDP classifier placed this
359
phylotype in the family Anaerolineaceae. The closest cultivated isolate is Anaerolinea
360
thermolimosa (85% sequence similarity), which was isolated from methanogenic
361
sludge granules46.
362
GQ406185) was found in submerged Lake Huron sinkholes inundated with hypoxic,
363
sulfate-rich groundwater47. Members of Anaerolinea are present at high frequency in
364
many
365
contaminated aquifers, sediments, and soils48. Anaerolinea were also enriched in
366
methanogenic oil-degrading microcosms amended with North Sea crude oil46,
367
suggesting a link with methanogenic hydrocarbon degradation. Anaerolineaceae
368
sequences were frequently detected in sulfidogenic crude oil-degrading microcosms
369
when sulfate was depleted and n-alkane degradation had occurred49. These previous
370
studies suggest that members of Anaerolineaceae may be correlated with
371
biodegradation of hydrocarbon contaminants under strictly anaerobic conditions. Here,
372
a direct link between Anaerolineaceae and methanogenic aniline degradation was
373
demonstrated using SIP, providing evidence for an additional novel physiological trait
374
to be attributed to Anaerolineaceae.
The closest uncultured clone (97% sequence similarity,
hydrocarbon-impacted
environments
including
petroleum
reservoirs,
375 376
The 208 bp T-RF was represented by a phylotype belonging to the order
377
Burkholderiales. The closet cultivated isolate was Methylibium petroleiphilum PM1
378
(93% sequence similarity)50. Strain PM1 is notable for its capability of using methyl
379
tert-butyl ether (MTBE) as a sole carbon and energy source under aerobic conditions51.
380
The genus Methylibium contains some species that are able to degrade other organic
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381
compounds52, 53. Sequences corresponding to the 208 bp T-RF were not related to any
382
known aniline-degrading bacteria, suggesting that these phylotypes might be novel
383
anaerobic aniline-degrading bacteria. The 274 bp T-RF was predominant in the
384
13
385
Acidovorax-related bacteria. This phylotype was most closely related to Acidovorax
386
defluvii strain BSB411 (98% sequence similarity)54. Members of Acidovorax were
387
also
388
hydrocarbon56, nitrobenzene and mono-nitrophenol57. Some species of Acidovorax,
389
including Acidovorax delafieldii and Acidovorax facilis, are facultative bacteria58,
390
59
391
FW-M produced methane (indicative of a strictly anaerobic environment), it is
392
hypothesized that the detected Acidovorax phylotypes are facultatively anaerobic
393
aniline degraders or that they may degrade aniline derived metabolites. Bacteria
394
represented by the 208 bp and 274 bp T-RFs were present in both 12C- and 13C-DNA
395
fractions (Figure S5). Both these two phylotypes belonged to the order
396
Burkholderiales. Burkholderiales have been detected in many environments
397
contaminated by PAHs60-65. In addition, members of Burkholderiales were associated
398
with toluene and m-xylene degradation under denitrifying and aerobic conditions66-68.
C-DNA fractions of both the GW-M and FW-M and was identified as
responsible
for
degradation
of
chlorobenzene55,
polycyclic
aromatic
. Since GW-M and FW-M were established under anoxic conditions, and since
399 400
Other phylotypes identified in clone library derived from 13C-fractions
401
Some phylotypes not enriched in
402
13
403
clone library derived from GW-M, but the corresponding T-RF was not enriched in
404
13
405
related (99% sequence similarity) to a putative Fe(III)-reducing benzene-degrading
13
C-DNA TRFLP profiles were detected in the
C-DNA fraction clone libraries. Members of Peptococcaceae were identified in the
C-DNA fractions. The Peptococcaceae clones identified in this study were closely
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406
bacterium previously identified by DNA-SIP69. No exogenous Fe3+ was provided to
407
the microcosms, and prolonged incubation under reduced conditions would be
408
expected to result in reduction of naturally-occurring Fe3+. However, it appears that
409
Peptococcaceae might be responsible for consuming some of the labeled aniline in
410
this system. Phylotypes related to the order Syntrophobacterales were detected in
411
clone libraries of GW-M and FW-M. Syntrophobacterales consists of syntrophic
412
bacteria capable of degrading organic compounds such as acetate, propionate or
413
butyrate70-72. Further, it has also been proposed that Syntrophobacterales (Smithella)
414
can degrade hydrocarbons73. Detection of Syntrophobacterales phylotypes as active
415
organisms in aniline-degrading microcosms suggest that they are either directly
416
involved in the initial degradation of aniline, or that they degrade intermediates in the
417
aniline degradation pathway. Several studies reported that aromatic compounds such
418
as benzene and toluene were degraded by syntrophic interactions of primary
419
biodegraders with syntrophic bacteria and/or hydrogen consuming species69,
420
Anaerobic aniline degradation in the current study is likely to be a syntrophic process.
74-76
.
421 422
Aniline loss was observed in long-term microcosms from an industrial contaminated
423
site incubated under different redox conditions. A limited number of studies have
424
reported aniline loss under different anoxic redox conditions27,
425
identify the bacteria responsible for biodegradation. Here, we report that aniline loss
426
at two sites within our study area, with different histories of contaminant exposure
427
and environmental conditions (aquifer versus aquatic sediment), is mediated by
428
location-specific microbes within this industrial site. Using DNA-SIP the taxonomic
429
groups that incorporated
430
from known aniline degraders (Figure 5). In particular, Ignavibacterium-affiliated
29, 30
but did not
13
C carbons during aniline loss were shown to be different
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431
bacteria have not previously been associated with biodegradation of aromatic
432
compounds. The active microbial consortia also included bacteria related to those
433
known to be involved in syntrophic associations. Future work should explore the roles
434
of these phylotypes in field-based studies of natural attenuation of aniline at this and
435
other aniline-contaminated sites.
436 437
Acknowledgements
438
The authors gratefully acknowledge funding from E. I. du Pont de Nemours and
439
Company to D.E.F. and W.H. for the long-term microcosm study. We thank the New
440
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Office of Science, for funding to
441
D.E.F and M.M.H. in support of SIP analyses.
442
(formerly DuPont) and all environmental support personnel at the site for enabling
443
this study. We thank Kathy West of AECOM for assistance with site materials and
444
information.
We thank Edward Lutz of Chemours
445 446
Supporting Information Available
447
This information is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
448 449
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to identify key iron-reducing microorganisms involved in anaerobic benzene
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degradation. ISME J. 2007,1, (7), 643-653.
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(70) Cheng, L.; Ding, C.; Li, Q.; He, Q.; Dai, L.-r.; Zhang, H., DNA-SIP reveals that
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Syntrophaceae play an important role in methanogenic hexadecane degradation. PloS
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ONE 2013,8, (7), e66784.
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(71) Hatamoto, M.; Imachi, H.; Yashiro, Y.; Ohashi, A.; Harada, H., Detection of
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active butyrate-degrading microorganisms in methanogenic sludges by RNA-based
669
stable isotope probing. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2008,74, (11), 3610-3614.
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(72) Struchtemeyer, C. G.; Duncan, K. E.; McInerney, M. J., Evidence for syntrophic
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butyrate
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hydrocarbon-contaminated aquifer. FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 2011,76, (2), 289-300.
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(73) Gray, N.; Sherry, A.; Grant, R.; Rowan, A.; Hubert, C.; Callbeck, C.; Aitken, C.;
674
Jones, D.; Adams, J.; Larter, S., The quantitative significance of Syntrophaceae and
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syntrophic partnerships in methanogenic degradation of crude oil alkanes. Environ.
676
Microbiol. 2011,13, (11), 2957-2975.
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(74) Sun, W.; Sun, X.; Cupples, A. M., Identification of Desulfosporosinus as
678
toluene-assimilating microorganisms
679
Biodeterior. Biodegradation 2014,88, 13-19.
680
(75) Herrmann, S.; Kleinsteuber, S.; Chatzinotas, A.; Kuppardt, S.; Lueders, T.;
681
Richnow,
682
benzene-degrading enrichment culture by DNA stable isotope probing. Environ.
metabolism
H.
under
H.; Vogt,
C.,
sulfate-reducing
from a
conditions
in
a
methanogenic consortium. Int.
Functional characterization
of an anaerobic
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684
Microbiol. 2010,12, (2), 401-411. A (76) van der Zaan, B. M.; Saia, F. T.; Stams, A. J.; Plugge, C. M.; de Vos, W. M.;
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Smidt, H.; Langenhoff, A. A.; Gerritse, J., Anaerobic benzene degradation under River
686
denitrifying conditions: Peptococcaceae as dominant benzene degraders and evidence
687
for a syntrophic process. Environ. Microbiol. 2012,14, (5), 1171-1181.
683
Site Boundary
Aquifer
Road
688 Bridge
689 690
Canal
691 692
B b
693
c
d
e LCGW
a HCGW
694 695
Canal
696 697
HCFW LCFW
698 699
Direction of Canal Water Flow
700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 28
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709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724
Figure 1 Sampling locations at a large chemical manufacturing site in southern New
725
Jersey. Map A demonstrates the relative locations of sampling sites. Map B shows the
726
aniline concentration contour near each location. Symbols in contour map: a: >50,000
727
µg/L; b: 25,000 to 50,000 µg/L; c: 5,000 to 25,000 µg/L; d: 1,000 to 5,000 µg/L; e: 5
728
to 1,000 µg/L. HCGW, highly contaminated ground water aquifer; LCGW, lightly
729
contaminated ground water aquifer; HCFW, highly contaminated freshwater canal
730
sediments; LCFW, lightly contaminated freshwater canal sediment.
731 732 733
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734 735
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
736 737 738 739 740 741 742 743 744 745 746 747 748 749 750 751 752 753 754 755 756 757 758
Figure 2. Aniline concentrations in sulfidogenic and methanogenic microcosms including
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759
LCGW-S (A), LCGW-M (B), HCGW-S (C), HCGW-M (D), LCFW-S (E), LCFW-M (F),
760
HCFW-S (G), and HCFW-M (H). Arrows indicate re-amendment of aniline. Note
761
different axis scales. For killed control, symbols are averages of triplicate cultures and
762
error bars represent one standard deviation. LCGW-S, lightly contaminated groundwater
763
aquifer sulfidogenic treatment; LCGW-M, lightly contaminated groundwater aquifer
764
methanogenic
765
sulfidogenic
766
methanogenic treatment; LCFW-S, lightly contaminated freshwater canal sulfidogenic
767
treatment; LCFW-M, lightly contaminated freshwater canal methanogenic treatment;
768
HCFW-S, highly contaminated freshwater aquifer sulfidogenic treatment; HCFW-M,
769
highly contaminated freshwater aquifer methanogenic treatment.
treatment; treatment;
HCGW-S,
highly
contaminated
groundwater
aquifer
HCGW-M,
highly
contaminated
groundwater
aquifer
770 771 772 773 774 775 776 777 778 779 780 781 782 783 784 785 786 31
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787 788 789 790 791 792 793 794 795 796 797 798 799 800 801 802 803 804 805 806 807 808 809 810
Figure 3. Sulfate concentrations in sulfate-amended treatments (A) LCGW-S; (B)
811
LCFW-S; and (C) HCFW-S. Note that axis scales are different. Only one microcosm
812
from HCGW-S demonstrated aniline degradation. No sulfate loss occurred in
813
HCGW-S.
814 815 816 817 32
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GW-M (13C aniline)
T1-12C top band
T1-13C bottom band
GW-M (13C aniline)
239 bp
GW-M (13C aniline)
T2-12C top band
T2-13C bottom band
274 bp
T1-12C top band
T1-13C bottom band
GW-M (13C aniline)
FW-M (13C aniline)
120 bp
FW-M (13C aniline)
208 bp
T2-12C top band
FW-M (13C aniline)
T2-13C bottom band
274 bp
FW-M (13C aniline)
818 819 820 821 822 823
Figure 4. TRFLP profiles from different 13C-aniline amended treatments at different
824
time points. The treatment, time point, and
825
arrows and numbers indicate the fragment length of the enriched T-RFs in
826
fractions.
12
C or
13
C fractions are indicated. The 13
C-DNA
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Flectobacillus lacus strain R73022 (HM032866.1) Acidovorax defluvii strain BSB411 (NR 026506.1) 75 274 bp T-RF enriched in heavy fractions of GW-M and FW-M 92 100 Uncultured Acidovorax sp. clone 5_0_B1_b (JQ087024.1) Diaphorobacter sp. J5-51 (GU017974.1) Delftia sp. AN3 (AY052781.1) 100 Aniline-degrading bacterium HY99 (AF210313.1)* Rhodoferax sp. Asd M2A1 (FM955857.1) Mitsuaria sp. H24L1C (EU714910.1) 208 bp T-RF enriched in heavy fractions of FW-M 100 Uncultured bacterium clone AN162 in PCB dechlorinating sediments (GQ859926.1) Methylibium petroleiphilum strain PM1 (NR 041768.1) 100 Methylibium fulvum (AB649013.1) Erwinia amylovora strain HSA 6 (GQ222272.1)* Rhizobium borbori strain DN316 (EF125187.1)* Desulfobacterium anilini strain Ani1 (NR 025348.1)* Melioribacterroseus P3M-2 (NR 074796.1) 239 bp T-RF enriched in heavy fractions of GW-M 100 100 Uncultured Chlorobi bacterium clone Aug-CD246 (JQ795235.1) 100 Ignavibacterium album JCM 16511 (NR 074698.1) 100 Ignavibacterium album strain Mat9-16 (NR 112875.1) 100 120 bp T-RF enriched in heavy fractions of FW-M Uncultured Chloroflexi bacterium clone 4.26 (GQ183434.1) Anaerolinea thermolimosa strain IMO-1 (NR 040970.1) 99 Anaerolinea thermophila UNI-1 (NR 074383.1) 59
86 88
100
44
65
79
56
88
100
0.05
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Figure 5. Phylogenetic tree using partial 16S rRNA gene sequences of the major aniline-degrading phylotypes, with the closest matches within GenBank and the closest type strain, constructed with MEGA 5.0 software using the neighbor-joining method. 656 bp unambiguously aligned positions were used for analysis. *indicates aniline-degrading isolates identified in previous studies. Acronyms: GW-M, anoxic microcosms seeded from highly contaminated groundwater aquifer sediments; FW-M, methanogenic microcosms seeded from lightly contaminated canal sediments.
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1
Table 1. Phylogenetic groups and number of bacterial 16SrRNA gene clones in clone
2
libraries from 13C-fractions in two treatments and their corresponding Mnl I terminal
3
restriction fragment sizes as determined by in silico enzyme digestion.
4
Phylogenetic group Acidobacteria Gp3 Actinobacteria Rhodococcus Betaproteobacteria Burkholderiales Acidovorax Rhodocyclaceae Methylibium Deltaproteobacteria Syntrophaceae Chlorobi Ignavibacterium Chloroflexi Anaerolineaceae Firmicutes Peptococcaceae Fusibacter Unclassified Bacterium Total number of clones
Aquifer sediments, Canal Sediments, Anaerobic (GW-M) Methanogenic (FW-M) number of clones number of clones
Mnl I digested fragment size (bp)
-
10
170
9
12
179
14 39 2
3 34 10 28
168 277 146 211
8
5
259
51
5
243, 285
3
43
54,120
6 3
-
130 388 N/A
2
135
150
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
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13C-aniline
12C
DNA
+ Active aniline degraders
DNA
Substrate addition
DNA extraction
13C
DNA +carrier DNA Separation of labeled and unlabeled DNA
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
TRFLP + Clone library analysis