Organohalide respiration with chlorinated ethenes ... - ACS Publications

Natalie L. Cápiro. 7. , Tyler F. Marcet. 7. , Jun Yan. 1,3,6. , Kurt D. Pennell. 7. 3 and Frank E. Löffler. 1,2,3,4,5,6*. 4. 5. 1. Center for Enviro...
0 downloads 0 Views 1MB Size
Subscriber access provided by Olson Library | Northern Michigan University

Article

Organohalide respiration with chlorinated ethenes under low pH conditions Yi Yang, Natalie L Cápiro, Tyler F Marcet, Jun Yan, Kurt D Pennell, and Frank E Löffler Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01510 • Publication Date (Web): 30 Jun 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 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 33

Environmental Science & Technology

Organohalide respiration with chlorinated ethenes under low pH conditions

1 2 3

Yi Yang1,2,6, Natalie L. Cápiro7, Tyler F. Marcet7, Jun Yan1,3,6, Kurt D. Pennell7

4

and Frank E. Löffler1,2,3,4,5,6*

5 6

1

Center for Environmental Biotechnology, 2Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering,

7

3

Department of Microbiology, 4 Department of Biosystems Engineering and Soil Science,

8

University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996, USA; 5Biosciences Division, and 6Joint Institute

9

for Biological Sciences (JIBS), Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN 37831, USA;

10

7

11

USA

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tufts University, Medford, MA 02155,

12 13 14 15 16

*Corresponding author

17

Frank E. Löffler

18

University of Tennessee

19

Department of Microbiology

20

M409 Walters Life Sciences

21

Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-0845

22

Phone: (865) 974-4933

23

E-mail:[email protected]

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

1

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 2 of 33

24

Abstract

25

Bioremediation at chlorinated solvent sites often leads to groundwater acidification due to

26

electron donor fermentation and enhanced dechlorination activity. The microbial reductive

27

dechlorination process is robust at circumneutral pH, but activity declines at groundwater pH

28

values below pH 6.0. Consistent with this observation, the activity of tetrachloroethene (PCE)

29

dechlorinating cultures declined at pH 6.0 and was not sustained in pH 5.5 medium, with one

30

notable exception. Sulfurospirillum multivorans dechlorinated PCE to cis-1,2-dichloroethene

31

(cDCE) in pH 5.5 medium and maintained this activity upon repeated transfers. Microcosms

32

established with soil and aquifer materials from five distinct locations dechlorinated PCE-to-

33

ethene at pH 5.5 and pH 7.2. Dechlorination to ethene was maintained following repeated

34

transfers at pH 7.2, but no ethene was produced at pH 5.5, and only the transfer cultures derived

35

from the Axton Cross Superfund (ACS) microcosms sustained PCE dechlorination to cDCE as a

36

final product. 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing of pH 7.2 and pH 5.5 ACS enrichments

37

revealed distinct communities, with Dehalococcoides being the dominant dechlorinator in pH 7.2

38

and Sulfurospirillum in pH 5.5 cultures. PCE-to-trichloroethene- (TCE-) and PCE-to-cDCE-

39

dechlorinating isolates obtained from the ACS pH 5.5 enrichment shared 98.6%, and 98.5% 16S

40

rRNA gene sequence similarities to Sulfurospirillum multivorans. These findings imply that

41

sustained Dehalococcoides activity cannot be expected in low pH (i.e., ≤5.5) groundwater, and

42

organohalide-respiring Sulfurospirillum spp. are key contributors to in situ PCE reductive

43

dechlorination under low pH conditions.

44 45 46

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

2

Page 3 of 33

Environmental Science & Technology

47

Introduction

48

Reductive dechlorination processes release hydrochloric acid, which rapidly dissociates to form

49

chloride anions and hydronium ions in groundwater. Furthermore, the fermentation of

50

biostimulation substrates (e.g., lactate, emulsified vegetable oil, molasses, corn cobs, newsprint,

51

wood chips, microbial biomass) results in acidification due to the production of organic acids

52

and protons.1 In aquifers with low buffering capacity, pH reductions can decrease rates and even

53

stall microbial dechlorination processes.2 Additional undesirable secondary effects of

54

acidification include increased solubility of toxic metals and metalloids, which may affect

55

microbial activity and/or impair groundwater quality (i.e., exceed regulatory standards).3

56

Extensive dechlorination and fermentation reactions may generate enough hydrochloric acid to

57

affect the groundwater pH depending on the buffering capacity of the aquifer. For instance,

58

calcite plays an important role in buffering the pH of calcareous soils, but the amount of calcite

59

in aquifers varies considerably.4 A recent USGS investigation reported that groundwater in

60

aquifer systems of the Northern Atlantic Coastal Plain was commonly acidic (median pH 5.3)

61

due to the lack of soluble minerals (e.g., calcium carbonate) that would buffer the natural acidity

62

(e.g., acidic rainfall). This observation suggests that remediation of sites impacted with

63

chlorinated ethenes in this aquifer system would be challenging without pH management.5

64

A common response to groundwater pH reductions following in situ biostimulation is the

65

addition of alkaline chemicals or compounds with buffering capacity to increase and maintain

66

the pH in a range suitable for dechlorinating bacteria. For example, additions of sodium

67

bicarbonate or colloidal Mg(OH)2 have been used to manipulate groundwater pH in situ; 6, 7

68

however, large amounts of bicarbonate may be required to adjust the pH of calcareous soils.

69

Further complicating the issue is the fact that increased carbonate concentrations can cause

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

3

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 4 of 33

70

precipitation rather than dissolution of calcite (CaCO3↓↔Ca2++CO32-).8 A low cost, self-

71

regulating approach using silicate minerals, which exhibit pH dependent solubility and

72

dissolution rates, was proposed to buffer groundwater, but further experimentation indicated that

73

silicate minerals and their dissolution products inhibited microbial reductive dechlorination of

74

chlorinated ethenes.9 Modeling approaches have been applied to estimate the aquifer buffering

75

capacity required for stabilizing groundwater pH;7, 8, 10-14 however, the biogeochemical and

76

hydrological complexity of in situ subsurface environments limits their widespread

77

implementation. Although engineering approaches are feasible, in situ pH adjustment remains

78

challenging, and all current approaches have limitations.

79

An alternate solution would be to rely on microorganisms that perform reductive

80

dechlorination under low pH conditions. Enhanced in situ reductive dechlorination has shown

81

success as a cost-effective remedy for a variety of chlorinated pollutants.15 A number of bacterial

82

isolates responsible for tetrachloroethene (PCE) reductive dechlorination have been identified

83

and include members of the genera Desulfitobacterium, Sulfurospirillum, Dehalobacter,

84

Desulfuromonas, Geobacter, Dehalogenimonas and Dehalococcoides (Dhc).16, 17 These

85

dechlorinating bacteria were all enriched and isolated at circumneutral pH, and subsequent

86

characterization revealed that maximum reductive dechlorination activity was achieved at

87

circumneutral pH, and dechlorination activities of these pure cultures were severely inhibited

88

below pH 6.0, and no dechlorination was reported at pH 97% sequence similarity)

209

sequences (Table S3). The sequences were imported into the Geneious software environment

210

(Biomatters, Auckland, New Zealand), aligned with MAFFT,32 and a 16S rRNA gene

211

phylogenetic tree was constructed with Tree Builder using software’s default settings. A Zeiss

212

Axio Imager.A2 was used to visualize the liquid cultures for microscopic examination.

213

Analytical methods. The pH of the bulk liquid phase was measured by transferring 1 mL liquid

214

aliquots from a culturing vessel into a 2-mL plastic tube. After centrifuging the tube for 30

215

seconds at 18,000 x g, the pH of the supernatant was measured with a Fisher Scientific Accumet

216

Glass AgCl pH electrode (Pittsburgh, PA, USA). Total chlorinated solvent mass or

217

concentrations of chlorinated compounds were determined by analyzing headspace gas samples

218

on an Agilent 7890A gas chromatograph (GC) equipped with an Agilent DB624 column and a

219

flame ionization detector (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). Gas samples (100 µL)

220

were removed from the headspace of 160-mL serum bottles using a gastight 250 µL Hamilton

221

SampleLock syringe (Hamilton, Reno, NV) and then manually injected into the GC. The

222

concentrations of chlorinated ethenes were calculated by normalizing the peak area values to

223

those of standard curves generated by adding known amounts of chlorinated ethenes to 160-mL

224

serum bottles with the same gas to liquid ratios. The total moles of polychlorinated ethenes per

225

bottle were calculated according to the equation: total moles = (volume x density) / molecular

226

weight. The retention times for different chlorinated ethenes and ethene were determined by

227

injecting neat compounds into the GC, and used to assign peaks to PCE daughter products.33, 34

228

The average PCE dechlorination rates in pH 5.5 and pH 7.2 cultures were calculated based on the

229

total amount of chloride released over 11-day and 7-day incubation periods, respectively, during

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

10

Page 11 of 33

Environmental Science & Technology

230

which about 90% of the initial amount of PCE had been dechlorinated. Chloride release

231

calculations were based on the gas chromatographic concentration measurements of PCE, TCE

232

and cDCE, and assumed that each reductive dechlorination step liberates one chlorine substituent

233

as chloride.

234

Sequence data. The 16S rRNA gene sequences of Sulfurospirillum sp. strain ACSTCE and strain

235

ACSDCE were deposited to GenBank under accession numbers KX101071 and KX101070.

236

Amplicon sequencing data of pH 7.2 and pH 5.5 ACS enrichments were deposited to GenBank

237

under accession numbers SRX2547923 and SRX2547924.

238 239

Results

240

Screening dechlorinating isolates and consortium BDI for low pH reductive dechlorination

241

activity. Desulfuromonas michiganensis strain BB1 (PCE→cDCE), Desulfitobacterium sp.

242

strain Viet1 (PCE→TCE), Desulfitobacterium sp. strain JH1 (PCE→cDCE), Geobacter lovleyi

243

strain SZ (PCE→cDCE) and consortium BDI (PCE→ethene) containing strain SZ and Dhc

244

strains GT, FL2 and BAV1 dechlorinated PCE to the expected dechlorination end product ethene

245

at pH 7.2, but PCE dechlorinating activity was diminished or lost following transfers in pH 6.0

246

and pH 5.5 medium (Table 2). Geobacter lovleyi strain SZ dechlorinated 68.5 µmoles PCE to

247

cDCE within 48 hours at pH 7.2, but dechlorination of the same amount of PCE at pH 6.0

248

required more than 10 days, and no PCE dechlorination was observed at pH 5.5. Similarly,

249

Desulfuromonas michiganensis strain BB1 dechlorinated PCE to cDCE within one week at pH

250

7.2, but it took more than 30 days to degrade PCE to cDCE at pH 6.0. Sulfurospirillum

251

multivorans was the only tested organism able to degrade PCE to cDCE at pH 5.5, 6.0 and 7.2

252

within 4 days (Table S4); however, this organism could not sustain PCE dechlorination at pH 5.0.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

11

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 12 of 33

253

Dechlorination activity in microcosms and enrichment cultures. PCE to ethene reductive

254

dechlorination was observed in microcosms established at pH 5.5 and pH 7.2 with samples

255

collected from five sampling sites (#5, 6, 7, 11 and 16 in Table S1). Microcosms established with

256

the soil sample from the ACS site (#13) degraded PCE to ethene at pH 7.2, but VC was the

257

dechlorination end product at pH 5.5 (Figure 1). Microcosms established with acidic peat bog

258

material from the Shady Valley location (#12) showed PCE to cDCE dechlorination at pH 5.5

259

and pH 7.2. The tidal flat sample (#15) degraded PCE to TCE at pH 7.2, but not at pH 5.5. No

260

PCE dechlorination activity was detected in the microcosms established with the other site

261

materials tested.

262

Attempts to establish stable PCE-to-ethene-dechlorinating enrichment cultures in pH 5.5

263

medium were not successful for any of the ethene-producing microcosms. PCE dechlorination

264

activity was lost following two consecutive transfers in pH 5.5 medium, except the ACS

265

enrichment cultures, which maintained PCE-to-cDCE reductive dechlorination activity at pH 5.5

266

(Figure 1). By comparison, transfer cultures derived from the ethene-producing pH 7.2 ACS

267

microcosms maintained PCE-to-ethene dechlorination activity following consecutive transfers to

268

pH 7.2 medium (Figure 1). At pH 4.5, PCE dechlorination to cDCE was observed in

269

microcosms established with materials from the ACS site, but PCE dechlorination activity could

270

not be maintained at this pH in transfer cultures (i.e., in the absence of the solid phase).

271 272

pH effects on community structure. To investigate the changes in community structure in

273

response to pH differences, and to identify the dechlorinator(s) responsible for the measured

274

reductive dechlorination activity in enrichment cultures derived from the ACS microcosms that

275

sustained PCE dechlorination at both pH 5.5 and pH 7.2, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

12

Page 13 of 33

Environmental Science & Technology

276

was performed. After removing low quality reads, 69,030 sequences (17,441,054 total base pairs)

277

and 103,503 sequences (26,171,881 total base pairs) were obtained from the ACS pH 5.5 and the

278

pH 7.2 enrichments, respectively. A total of 172,409 sequences from the pH 5.5 and the pH 7.2

279

enrichment cultures were classified into 815 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) based on a 98%

280

identity cutoff (Table S2), and only 41 sequences could not be classified according to the

281

SILVAngs empirical threshold ((sequence identity + alignment coverage) / 2 >= 93%).31

282

Rarefaction analysis of sequences showed that the rarefaction curves did not plateau, suggesting

283

that the sequencing effort did not capture the diversity of low abundance members in both the pH

284

7.2 and the pH 5.5 enrichment cultures (Figure S1).

285

Sequences representing the phyla Proteobacteria and Firmicutes were most abundant in the

286

pH 5.5 and pH 7.2 ACS enrichment cultures, respectively (Figure 2). The phyla Proteobacteria,

287

Firmicutes, and Bacteroidetes were relatively enriched and contributed 57.9%, 31.8%, and 7.2%,

288

respectively, to the classified sequences in the pH 5.5 enrichment, compared with 2.8%, 59.6%,

289

and 3.0%, respectively, in the pH 7.2 enrichment. At pH 7.2, sequences of the phyla Caldiserica

290

(4.0%), Chloroflexi (21.9%) and Spirochaetes (4.4%) were more abundant (Figure 2). Sequences

291

representing the phyla Aigarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota, Chlorobi, Lentisphaerae, Nitrospirae and

292

Synergistetes were present in the pH 7.2 PCE-to-ethene-dechlorinating enrichment, but were not

293

observed in the pH 5.5 enrichment, indicating their preference for circumneutral pH conditions.

294

By comparison, sequences representing the phyla Euryarchaeota, Nanoarchaeota, Dictyoglomi,

295

Fusobacteria and Thermotogae were detected in pH 5.5 PCE-to-cDCE-degrading ACS

296

enrichment culture, but not in the pH 7.2 cultures. Furthermore, the most abundant genera in pH

297

5.5 ACS enrichment cultures differed from those dominating in the pH 7.2 enrichment cultures.

298

At pH 7.2, the 16S rRNA gene sequences of the genera Dhc (phylum Chloroflexi) and

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

13

Environmental Science & Technology

Page 14 of 33

299

Acetobacterium (phylum Firmicutes) dominated the enrichment and accounted for 22.6% and

300

57.6% of all sequences, respectively. In contrast, Desulfovibrio (phylum Proteobacteria) (33.0%),

301

Sulfurospirillum (phylum Proteobacteria) (25.2%), and Megasphaera (phylum Chloroflexi)

302

(19.9%) sequences dominated the pH 5.5 enrichment (Table 3).

303 304

Low pH PCE reductive dechlorination by two Sulfurospirillum isolates. Isolation efforts

305

focused on the ACS PCE-to-cDCE-dechlorinating enrichments that maintained dechlorinating

306

activity for at least 10 consecutive transfers in pH 5.5 medium. Repeated dilution to extinction

307

series and transferring individual colonies from the 10-4 and 10-5 semi-solid medium dilution

308

tubes yielded two PCE-dechlorinating isolates. Light microscopic observations revealed uniform,

309

spirillum-shaped cells, and a single 16S rRNA gene sequence type was recovered from each

310

culture. Both isolates grew with PCE in defined mineral salts medium at pH 5.5, and

311

dechlorinated PCE at similar rates of 28.3±2.3 µmoles Cl- released per liter and day. Isolate

312

ACSTCE generated TCE as the dechlorination end product, whereas isolate ACSDCE dechlorinated

313

PCE and TCE to cDCE. Approximately 30% higher dechlorination rates were measured for both

314

isolates at pH 7.2 (Figure 3). Isolates ACSTCE and ACSDCE shared highly similar 16S rRNA

315

genes (99.7% identity) and affiliated with the genus Sulfurospirillum within the ε-Proteobacteria

316

class. Isolate ACSTCE and isolate ACSDCE shared 98.6% and 98.5% 16S rRNA gene sequence

317

identity, respectively, with the characterized PCE-to-cDCE dechlorinator Sulfurospirillum

318

multivorans (NR_121740.1). A phylogenetic analysis based on available Sulfurospirillum 16S

319

rRNA gene sequences demonstrated that ACSTCE and ACSDCE isolates were most closely related

320

to the PCE dechlorinator Sulfurospirillum sp. strain JPD-1 (AY189928.1) with 99.7% and 99.6 %

321

sequence identity, respectively (Figure 4).

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

14

Page 15 of 33

Environmental Science & Technology

322

Discussion

323

Microbial reductive dechlorination in low pH groundwater. Successful bioremediation of

324

groundwater impacted with chlorinated ethenes relies on the growth of native and/or

325

bioaugmented dechlorinating microorganisms, especially Dhc. Since Dhc sustains reductive

326

dechlorination activity within a narrow pH range (Table 1), adjustments to maintain a

327

circumneutral pH environment may be necessary. An alternative solution is to rely on

328

microorganisms capable of degrading chlorinated ethenes to ethene at low pH (i.e., pH < 6.0).

329

The available Dhc cultures cannot sustain growth at pH