The mechanism of nitrate-Cr(VI) reduction mediated by microbial under different initial pHs

The mechanism of nitrate-Cr(VI) reduction mediated by microbial under different initial pHs

Journal Pre-proof The mechanism of nitrate-Cr(VI) reduction mediated by microbial under different initial pHs Yutian Hu, Nan Chen, Tong Liu, Chuanping...

3MB Sizes 0 Downloads 27 Views

Journal Pre-proof The mechanism of nitrate-Cr(VI) reduction mediated by microbial under different initial pHs Yutian Hu, Nan Chen, Tong Liu, Chuanping Feng, Linlin Ma, Si Chen, Miao Li

PII:

S0304-3894(20)30423-4

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.122434

Reference:

HAZMAT 122434

To appear in:

Journal of Hazardous Materials

Received Date:

3 February 2020

Revised Date:

28 February 2020

Accepted Date:

28 February 2020

Please cite this article as: Hu Y, Chen N, Liu T, Feng C, Ma L, Chen S, Li M, The mechanism of nitrate-Cr(VI) reduction mediated by microbial under different initial pHs, Journal of Hazardous Materials (2020), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.122434

This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2020 Published by Elsevier.

The mechanism of nitrate-Cr(VI) reduction mediated by microbial under different initial pHs

Yutian Hua, Nan Chena* [email protected], Tong Liua, Chuanping Fenga, Linlin Maa, Si Chena, Miao Lib a

School of Water Resources and Environment, MOE Key Laboratory of Groundwater

ro of

Circulation and Environmental Evolution, China University of Geosciences (Beijing), Beijing, 100083, P.R. China b

School of Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, P.R. China

-p

* Corresponding Author:

re

(N. Chen), Phone: +86-10-82322281, Fax: +86-10-82321081

Jo

ur

na

lP

Graphicalabstrct

1

ro of -p re lP na

Highlights

Both Cr(VI) and nitrate were completely reduced at initial pH 10.0 and 11.0.



The primary genes for reducing nitrate and Cr(VI) were narG and azoR, respectively.



The dominant genus under alkaline environments was Pannonibacter.



The relative abundances of metabolic pathways were higher at pH 10.0 and 11.0.

Jo

ur





Potential interspecies cooperation was found to benefit removal of co-contaminant.

Abstract 2

To date, comparatively little research is known about the role of pH conditions in bioremediation of Cr(VI) contaminated aquifers. This study explored microbial Cr(VI) reduction and denitrification under different initial pHs. The underlying mechanism was also investigated. When testing 50 mg/L-N nitrate and 10 mg/L Cr(VI), complete contaminants removal was observed at initial pH 10.0 and 11.0, and only 10%-30% of removal achieved under other conditions, which might be ascribe to the significant up-

ro of

regulation of functional genes narG (8.31 and 10.46 folds) and azoR (24.90 and 15.96

folds) at initial pH 10.0 and 11.0. Metagenomic sequencing showed that alkali tolerant bacteria played major roles in the NO3--Cr(VI) reduction (i.e. Pannonibacter increased

-p

by 13.08% and 25.24% at initial pH 10.0 and 11.0), and metabolic pathways of

re

Degradation and Energy were found of increased abundant. Furthermore, a significative study suggested that potential interspecies cooperation existed at initial pH 11.0 to

lP

facilitating the simultaneous removal of contaminants, and Pannonibacter indicus might

na

be an important participant in the degradation of contaminants. The results of this study will fully understand the metabolic patterns of bacteria under alkaline conditions, expand

ur

the range of available functional bacteria, and enhance the practical aspects of cocontaminants remediation.

Jo

Keywords: pH; Nitrate-Cr(VI) bio-reduction; Metabolic pathway; Functional genes; Potential interspecies cooperation. 1. Introduction The residual nitrate in soil and groundwater initiated a cascade of large-scale environmental concerns with the widespread use of nitrogen fertilizer (Nieder et al., 3

2018). Excessive nitrate and nitrite (intermediate of nitrate reduction) loadings lead to severe water deterioration (such as eutrophication), and bring toxic effects on humans once using the contaminated water for drinking(Zhao et al., 2018). The U.S. Environment Protection Agency (USEPA) has set the maximum contaminant levels (MCL) of nitrate and nitrite at 10 and 1.0 mg L−1 (measured as N) in drinking water, respectively. Based on it, biological denitrification has attracted widespread attention

ro of

(Fan et al., 2018), which consecutively reduce nitrate to nitrite, nitric oxide, nitrous oxide and finally nitrogen gas with the participation of nitrate reductase, nitrite

reductase, nitric oxide reductase, nitrous oxide reductase (Diaz and Rosenberg, 2008).

-p

At the same time, the combined pollution of nitrate and Cr(VI), occurs in

re

intensive mining and smelting activities especially, poses a serious threat to the geological environment (Hausladen et al., 2018). Emissions from geological

lP

weathering and industrial processes arise the chromium flux in groundwater, primarily

na

as Cr(III) and Cr(VI) (Jobby et al., 2018). Cr(VI) (0.1 mg L−1 of MCL in drinking water proposed by USEPA) is recognized as carcinogens and toxins that can easily

ur

penetrate cells and inhibit biological processes (Sun et al., 2019), which hampers the denitrification process through decreasing the rate of conversion nitrate to (Sun et al.,

Jo

2019). Compared with the Cr(VI), Cr(III) is of lower mobility and bioavailable at neutral pH, and can be removed easily from water (Bhattacharya et al., 2019). Therefore, bio-reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) is one promising approach to remove chromium from contaminated groundwater (Chen et al., 2019). The pH of the nitrate and Cr (VI) contaminated area is of highly complexity. For 4

example, numerous chromium pollution sites in California have pH values varied from 3.0 to 12.0 (Hausladen et al., 2018). pH, one of the most important environmental index, governs the biogeochemical activities of microorganisms (Han et al., 2019). The optimum pH for most environmental strains of denitrifying bacteria has been reported to be between 7.0 and 8.0 (Gan et al., 2019). However, some researchers found that the aerobic granular denitrifying sludge was more adaptable to acidic rather conditions

ro of

alkaline conditions (Jiang et al., 2019). In addition, Cr(VI) reduction by some chromate

reduction bacteria (such as Geobacter sulfurreducens) was observed performed better

under neutral conditions (He et al., 2019), while another chromate reduction bacteria,

-p

Pannonibacter phragmitetus LSSE-09, preformed best in alkaline wastewaters (Xu et

re

al., 2011). In summary, pH affects the metabolism of microorganisms which utilize the substrates in wastewater, resulting in variations in the sludge stability and pollutant

lP

removal performance. However, to date, the behaviors of microorganisms under stress

na

from both Cr(VI) and nitrate at different initial pH values have not yet been reported, especially in terms of the energy supply, functional genes levels, and metabolism

ur

pathway. Therefore, it is important to investigate the response to the pH shock of the simultaneous Cr(VI) and nitrate removal in the mixed system by microorganisms, and it

Jo

will help to have a deeper understanding of the biogeochemical behavior of nitrogen and chromium.

Herein, the feasibility and mechanism of simultaneous bio-reduction of nitrate and Cr(VI) were investigated. To illustrate the bacterial diversity, succession and metabolic mechanisms in the process of microorganism degrading co-contaminants 5

under different initial pH values, the adaptive mechanism of functional flora acclimating to both nitrate and Cr(VI) stress was studied using metagenomic analysis. In addition, metagenome binning was utilized to find the main and potential players of the microbial communities in NO3--Cr(VI) degrading under alkaline condition. This study is likely to shed new light on the attenuation mechanism of nitrate and chromium-contaminated aquifers, and provides further understanding of the

ro of

biogeochemical cycle of nitrogen and chromium. 2. Materials and methods 2.1. Batch experiments

-p

A series of batch experiments were conducted in 100 mL serum bottles to explore

re

the effect of the initial pHs on contemporaneous nitrate and Cr(VI) reduction in triplicate. Then, approximately 3 mL anaerobic sludge (the best removal performance according to

lP

the results of different sludge dosage in Fig. S1) washed by 0.9% NaCl was re-inoculated

na

into a 100 mL serum bottle containing 100 mL of synthetic wastewater (0.4217 g CH3COONa, 0.0561 g K2HPO4 and 0.5 g yeast extract per liter) (Chen et al., 2019), in

ur

which 10 mg of Cr(VI) L-1 in the form of K2Cr2O7 and 50 mg L-1 of NO3--N in the form of NaNO3 were also involved in the synthetic wastewater, which were monitored using

Jo

a spectrophotometer (DR6000, Hach, USA). The initial pH values were adjusted to 5.0, 7.0, 10.0, 11.0, and 12.0 through the manual addition of 1.0 M HCl or 1.0 M NaOH (Qi et al., 2020), which determined from the analysis of pH in the contaminated site such as California (the range of pH was from 5 to 12) (Dhal et al., 2013). Then gentle mixing was provided by a shaker at 150 rpm. Other reactors inoculated with autoclaved 6

anaerobic sludge and without anaerobic sludge were also carried out under the same experimental conditions for comparison. At the same time, the experiments with actual water diluted 10 times (the initial Cr(VI) and TOC concentration were 120.5 ± 0.6 and 10.25 ± 0.64 mg L-1, respectively) were also carried out, adding 50 mg L-1 NO3--N and 0.4217 g CH3COONa, the adjusted pH was 11.0 (the results was showed in Fig. S2). Of which, each serum bottle was purged with nitrogen for 20 minutes (Du et al., 2020). And

ro of

mixed liquor samples were taken for nitrate, nitrite, ammonium, Cr(VI), total chromium,

electron transport system activity (ETSA), and cytochrome C (Cyt C) analysis, and the pH values were also monitored during the experiment. An environmental scanning

-p

electron microscope (ESEM, Quanta 200, Netherlands) and a fluorescence microscope

re

(BX53, Olympus, Japan) with an ultraviolet blue light-excited filter plate for microorganisms were used after batch experiments at initial pH 5.0, 7.0, and 11.0 to

lP

explore the differences in morphology (Duan et al., 2019, 2020). These differences were

na

distinguished with an AO/EB Staining Kit (Sangon, Shanghai, China), in which uniformly green, and orange represented live cells and necrotic cells, respectively.

ur

To characterize the reduction capacity of bacteria for Cr(VI) and nitrate, the effects of the initial Cr(VI) concentration (2, 5, 10, 20, or 50 mg L-1) and initial NO3--N

Jo

concentration (10, 20, 50, 70, or 100 mg L-1) were also investigated. The other experimental conditions were similar with those described above. The chemical methods and microorganismal analysis used in this study, including the cultivation of microorganisms, cell lysis, and cell separation methods, are detailed in Supporting Information (SI). 7

2.2. Molecular analysis Four biofilm samples at the fastest reduction rate were collected, marked with its pH values (5.0, 7.0, 10.0, and 11.0), and another sample (named as control) was collected from initial sludge. Total genomic DNA was extracted and amplified with the PCR primers

338F

(5’-ACTCCTACGGGAGGCAGCAG-3’)

and

806R

(5’-

GGACTACHVGGGTWTCTAAT-3’). Amplicon sequencing was then performed using

ro of

the MiSeq platform (Illumina, U.S.) at Majorbio Technology Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Raw sequences were submitted to the NCBI SRA database under the accession number

of SUB6207731. Variations in functional genes (narG, napA, nirS, nirK, norB, nosZ,

-p

chrA, chrR, nfsA, nemA, and azoR) were further quantified with quantitative real-time

re

PCR (q-PCR) using a StepOne Plus™ Real-Time PCR System (Thermo, U.S.) while the total RNA was extracted with a FastRNA Pro Soil-Indirect Kit (MP Bio, U.S.), and the

lP

cDNA was inversely transcribed with Revert Premium Reverse Transcriptase (Beyotime,

na

Shanghai, China). The q-PCR primers (Table S1) were synthesized by Sangon Biotech (Shanghai, China). Detailed methods about metagenome sequencing, assembling,

ur

annotating, and binning are provided in the SI Appendix. 3. Results and discussion

Jo

3.1 Performance of co-contaminants at different pH values pH is an important environmental factor influencing biogeochemical processes

significantly (Mary Mangaiyarkarasi et al., 2011). In this study, the nitrate and Cr(VI) concentrations decreased progressively over time in the experimental treatments with varied pH values (Fig. 1a, b, Figure S1). The average removal rates were 0.52 and 0.83 8

mg h-1 for nitrate and 0.12 and 0.14 mg h-1 for Cr(VI), with k of 0.0256 and 0.0892 h-1 for nitrate and 0.0202 and 0.0296 h-1 for Cr(VI), respectively (Table S2). Compared with the removal efficiencies of about 67% for nitrate (Vilardi et al., 2020) and 75% for Cr(VI) (Vilardi et al., 2019) under the additions of biomass and nZVI particles, they were all up to 99.8% at initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0 with the participation of microorganisms. For treatments with other initial pH, the removal efficiencies for nitrate and Cr(VI) were

ro of

only 10%-20% and 20%-30%, respectively, and the removal effects were not as well as

chemical method at pH 5.0-9.0 (Vilardi et al., 2018; Vilardi, 2019). It was also observed that the concentration of total Cr was below to 2 mg L-1 at initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0

-p

(Fig. S3c), implying that Cr(Ⅲ) was the main form of remaining chromium, and

re

precipitates as hydroxides.

At initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0, the accumulation of nitrite was less than 6 mg L-1,

lP

and complete nitrite reduction was observed within 144 and 72 h, respectively (Fig. 1c),

na

indicating that the potential NO2- reduction rate was at least as high as that of the NO3-. In addition, the complete reduction of nitrite was not observed at other pH values, which

ur

might be due to the significant effect of the initial pH on nitrite reduction pathway by affecting the activity of nitrite reductases (Kim et al., 2017). Furthermore, the pH was

Jo

also a factor in determining the NO3- fate for microorganisms (Šimek et al., 2002), and the concentration of NH4+ remained below the detection limit throughout the experiment under all pH conditions (data not shown), which can be speculated that NH4+ might be used by microorganisms as a nitrogen source. It was found that the carbon source utilization varied at different initial pH 9

conditions from Fig. 1d, and the utilization under pH of 10.0 and 11.0 were higher than that under other initial pHs. Approximately 232.5 ± 5 mg L-1 CH3COONa is required to reduce 10 mg L-1 Cr(VI) and 50 mg L-1 NO3--N, suggesting that microorganisms need to use carbon sources as nutrients to survive and reduce nitrate and Cr(VI). Differences in the pollutions reduction kinetic constant by microorganism might be due to differences in the energy supply, and they were measured by the value of ETSA and Cyt

ro of

C (Fig. 1e and f) which reflecting bacterial activities (Zimmermann et al., 1978). The ETSA value increased with the increasing initial pH (5.0-11.0). Additionally,

microorganism obtained electrons from Cyt C to reduce Cr(VI) and nitrate (Lovley, 1995;

-p

Zeng et al., 2018). Compared with the initial activity of bacteria after 36 h (the maximum

re

reduction time for nitrate and Cr(VI)), the Cyt C concentration increased by 1.2-fold and 1.6-fold at initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0, respectively, while it decreased under other initial

lP

pH values. This finding might be due to the bacteriocin production, which had the ability

na

to cause cell death and was favored under stressful growth conditions, suggesting that the initial pH had direct and indirect impacts on the growth and metabolic activity of

ur

microorganisms (Han et al., 2019). The analysis of the performance of simultaneous microbial nitrate and Cr(VI) reduction at initial pH 11.0 was shown in SI. In addition,

Jo

the microbial analysis and co-contaminant reduction location were also in SI 2.1 and 2.2. Cr(VI) and nitrate in mixed systems affect each other's reduction, the presence of Cr(VI) had a negative effect on denitrification, while the removal of Cr(VI) accelerated with the increasing of nitrate concentration. Furthermore, membrane-associated enzymes had a dominant effect on the microbial mediated reduction of Cr(VI) and nitrate. 10

3.2 Microbial community analysis Fig. 2 showed the different relative abundances of the dominant bacteria in all reactors. Proteobacteria is a typical phylum in the reactor with initial pH 10.0 and 11.0 as well as the initial microorganisms, but it only accounted for 16.01% and 9.68% of the total bacterial community structure in the reactors with pH 5.0 and 7.0. And Fimicutes dominated the two reactors, resulting in the acceleration or suppression of denitrification

ro of

and the removal of Cr(VI).

It was observed that the dominant genera were Enterococcus, Bacillus, and Pannonibacter under acidic, neutral, and alkaline conditions, respectively. This result

-p

indicated that bacteria were sensitive to the changes of pH values, and bacteria gradually

re

adapted to the changes in the environment through self-adjustment. Once the initial pH value changed, different operating conditions might select specific bacterial populations

lP

to adapt to these conditions. Interestingly, Enterococcus (a metal-reducing bacteria)

na

reportedly could reduce chromate (Sayel et al., 2012), but energy analysis (Fig. 1 e and f) implied that it might have lost the ability to reduce Cr(VI) owing to the lack of energy.

ur

A typical anaerobic bacteria -- Bacillus (61.87% with pH 7.0), belonging to Fimicutes, was associated with dissimilatory metal reduction and denitrification (Lovley, 1993; Ito

Jo

et al., 2019; Ma et al., 2019). Yet the kinetic constant of denitrification in system was only 0.0016 h-1, because the action of Cr(VI) converting to Cr(III) led to more generation of ROS and lower abundance of antioxidant genes including lexR and mdh at pH 7.0 (Fig. S9), thus denitrification would be inhibited through exerting deleterious effects on proteins and DNA in cells at initial pH 7.0 (Lyon and Alvarez, 2008). Compared to the 11

initial microorganisms, the abundance of Pannonibacter (facultative anaerobic bacteria) increased by 13.08% and 25.24% in reactors at initial pH of 10.0 and pH 11.0, respectively. This result associated with both chromate bio-reduction and denitrification (Bai et al., 2019; Chai et al., 2019), providing evidence for higher nitrate and Cr(Ⅵ) reduction kinetic constant at same conditions. In addition, it was speculated that Chryseobacterium (25.46%) and Anaerobacillus (20.76%) (potential candidates for the

ro of

wastewater treatment) had ability to reduce pollutant under alkaline environments

according to high percentage in reactors of pH 10.0 and 11.0. In summary, these findings

indicated that the pH had a significant effect on the bacterial community of the reactor,

-p

and the results confirmed that pH 10.0 and 11.0 might be more beneficial to bacterial

re

metabolism than other pH values. Additionally, the microorganism morphology, primary reduction location under different pH values were also explored in SI 2.3, consistent with

lP

the results that organism evolution, microbes built self-protecting structures against pH

na

or toxic pollutant shocks through forming different morphology. And the reduction of contaminants occurred primarily in the membrane region.

ur

3.3 Metabolic pathways analysis

It was observed that initial pH affected the microbial metabolic function (Fig. 3).

Jo

The relative abundance of Degradation metabolic pathways including amine and polyamine degradation, fatty acid degradation, and carbohydrates and carboxylates degradation under alkaline conditions was higher than those under acidic and neutral conditions (Fig. 3a). These metabolic pathways played important roles in supporting microorganism survival through the degrading of amino acids, fatty acid, and 12

carbohydrates. The results suggested that microorganisms could utilize the sodium acetate to serve as sources of nutrients and energy, which was consistent with the degradation of carbon source at different initial pHs (Fig. 1d). Meanwhile, the relative abundance of other metabolic pathways including Energy supply (Fig. 3b), Response to Stimulus (Fig. 3c), and Cellular Processes (Fig. 3d) were consistent with Degradation, indicating that microorganisms could provide more energy to survive. Compared to other

ro of

pHs, the microorganisms were more resistant to environmental changes through

metabolism such as TCA cycle, proteins involved in response to pH/DNA damage, and Quorum Sensing under alkaline conditions. Therefore, varied pH values could change

-p

the metabolic pathways by changing the gene abundance, benefitting the attenuation

re

(acidic and natural pH) or propagation (alkaline pH) to improve the reduction ability of nitrate and chromate.

lP

The relative expression of denitrifying functional genes might provide evidence for the extent or level of active denitrification, including napA, narG, nirS, nirK, norB, and

na

nosZ, which played major roles in the step of NO3-→NO2-, NO2-→NO, NO→N2O, N2O→

ur

N2, respectively (Henderson et al., 2010). As shown in Fig. 3e, pH exerted direct control on the reduction efficiency by affecting the relative expression of denitrification genes

Jo

(Liu et al., 2010). The relative expression levels of all the genes were significantly upregulated at initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0, compared with other pH conditions. The narG gene (8.31 and 10.46 folds) had a significant enhancement compared to napA gene (2.80 and 4.46 folds) at initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0, probably because the anaerobic denitrifying bacteria primarily expressed membrane-bound nitrate reductase to catalyze the 13

denitrification process. During the nitrite reduction process, nirK gene was the major coding gene of nitrite reductase according to the results of qPCR. NorB upregulated 24.88 and 33.12 folds, while nosZ showed no obvious fluctuations at different pH values, suggesting that the pH affected the sequence reduction during the denitrification process (Wang et al., 2018). It was reported that genes including nemA, nfsA, azoR, chrA, and chrR were

ro of

associated with the reduction and efflux of chromate (Thatoi et al., 2014). It was observed that the expression of nemA and nfsA did not differ significantly before and

after exposure to contaminants, while azoR provided a significant enhancement (24.90

-p

and 15.96 folds with pH 10.0 and 11.0 respectively) (Fig. 3e), which had an important

re

role in microorganismal resistance to oxidative stress (Misal and Gawai, 2018). The gene of azoR also showed a similar Cr(VI) reductases characteristic (He et al., 2010), In

lP

addition, the genes of chrA and chrR had slightly increment, and they were responsible

na

for chromate efflux (Alvarez et al., 2000) and reducing ROS production (Cheung and Gu, 2007), respectively. This result indicated that the cells had higher resistance to Cr(VI)

ur

toxicity under alkaline conditions.

3.4 Metabolic mechanism of bacterial cooperation

Jo

3.4.1 Metabolic potential of MAGs The qualities of the MAGs were shown in Table S5 and the phylogenomic analyses

of 74 genomic bins also showed in SI. A metagenomic sequence analysis could provide definitive evidence for the positive selection of functional genes under nitrate and Cr(VI) stress. As shown in Fig. S9, Enterococcus (metal reducing bacteria) only carried the 14

napA gene, and this series of evidence supported the low kinetic constant for denitrification at pH 5.0 and 7.0. The Halomonas genus (M5.13 and M7.1) (a typical denitrification bacteria) had a complete denitrification pathway, and yet its denitrification capacity was weak under both acidic and neutral conditions, illustrating why denitrification efficiencies were lower. It was found that Thauera sp000310145 (a typical denitrification bacteria) (M5.4, M7.10, M10.14, and M11.12) encoded the key

ro of

enzymes for complete denitrification. However, it was not conducive to nitrogen

removal according to the analysis of energy (Fig. 1) and qPCR (Fig. 3e). Rhodocyclaceae (Nitrate reduction bacteria) had no ability to use nitrite as an electron donor, causing a

-p

lack of nitrite reduction pathway, though it was extremely resistant to the pH (5.0-10.0).

re

Contrary to the previous studies (Sotres et al., 2016; Tu et al., 2019; Vijay et al., 2019), Burkholderiaceae (a metal reducing bacteria) (Bins M5.11, M7.6, and M10.8) and

lP

Acholeplasmataceae (Bins M5.2, M5.5, M5.12, M7.3, M7.7, M7.12, and M7.16) had no

na

genes for N metabolism at pH 5.0, 7.0, or 10.0, which might be due to the fact that the pH might lead to bacterial gene selection (Lund et al., 2014).

ur

It was found that 20.34% and 23.73% of the MAGs in the 59 MAGs did not carry the chromium reduction genes and the chromium transport genes under different pH

Jo

values, indicating that the reduction of chromate in a mixed microbial system was not the function of a single microbe, but it depended on multiple microbial collaboration. It was found that the azoR gene (52.54%) played a major role in the reduction of chromate, compared to the nemA (32.20%) and chrR genes (32.20%), confirmed by genes expression analysis. NfsA (Erysipelotrichaceae (M5.3)) and nfsB (Burkholderiaceae 15

(M5.11, M7.6, M10.8), Dysgonomonadaceae (M10.3), Flavobacteriaceae (M10.1), and Pseudomonadaceae (M7.13)) were the major oxygen-insensitive nitroreductases, and Cr(VI) reduction gave rise to the product of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and Cr(V) (Ackerley et al., 2006; Shang et al., 2019). Thus, the presence of the ROS response enzymes (recA, recG, and ruvB) was essential for bacteria to protect themselves from the ROS attacks. In addition, the Chryseobacterium (potential candidates for the

ro of

wastewater treatment) genus encoded enzyme about degrading Cr(VI) without

denitrification at pH 10.0, indicating that it had potential to reduce the chromate under alkaline conditions, consistent with Romaniuk et al. (2018). Moreover, the strain

-p

Pannonibacter indicus was isolated under alkaline conditions and had not been reported

re

for denitrification or Cr(VI) reduction, but it had complete denitrification genes and chromium reduction transport genes. Hence it was inferred that Pannonibacter indicus

lP

had great potential for simultaneously reduce nitrate and chromium. Notably, the

na

Pannonibacter (facultative anaerobic bacteria) genus could reduce nitrate (Bai et al., 2019), heavy metal (e.g. Cr(VI) (Chai et al., 2019) and As(V) (Bandyopadhyay et al.,

ur

2013)).

3.4.2 Bacterial metabolic pathways reconstruction at initial pH 11.0

Jo

The cooperation between different bacteria and various functional genes could

further reveal the common adaptations of bacterial communities under alkaline stress and joint nitrate and chromium stress (Fig. 4). The discrepant nitrogen metabolism pathways in varied MAGs provided insight into possible interbacterial transfer of inorganic nitrogen compounds (Hug et al., 2015). We found that most microorganisms 16

that used inorganic N were specialists, harboring only one or two pathways (Fig. 4). The decoupling of modular pathways with more than one enzymatic step was common (Fig. 4). For denitrification, 85% of the microbes had only a partial pathway (i.e., only one step was present for the transformation of NO2− to NO, N2O, and N2), rather than the whole pathway (NO3− to N2). For example, some bins (e.g. M11.1, M11.2 et al) were able to conduct dissimilative nitrate reduction to nitrite with narGHI and napAB encoded

ro of

enzymes, while M11.10 and M11.12 could only convert nitrate into nitrite assimilative by narB and nasAB encoded enzymes. M11.4 and M11.11 might use nitric oxide as

electron donors, while M11.9 converted nitrous oxide into nitrogen and released it into

-p

the atmosphere. Meanwhile, M11.14 had ability to convert nitrogen to ammonia nitrogen

re

(nifDKH) as a nutrient for its own use through fixing nitrogen. Notably, only the strains of Pannonibacter indicus and Thauera (denitrifying bacteria) had complete

lP

denitrification pathways. Thauera lacked energy supply due to the absence of most genes

na

including idh and acnB that played an important role in TCA cycle, so its weak denitrification could be conjectured, demonstrating that Pannonibacter indicus played a

ur

key role in this reduce co-contaminants process. In summary, denitrification was the result of a variety of microbial cooperation actions, while quorum sensing, flagellar

Jo

assembly, and the ABC transport system provided a possible microbial collaborative reduction of nitrates (Van Alst et al., 2007). The presence of different main chromate-reducing genes (chrR, frp, nemA, azoR, nfsA, nfsB, and kefF) indicated that different species had different chromium reductases, including flavin reductases, nitrate reductases, and flavin proteins. Notably, bins carrying 17

the chrR, nemA and azoR genes accounted for 43%, 36%, and 64% of the total bins assembled at pH 11.0, respectively, suggesting that they might be the primary genes for chromium reduction, which was consistent with the qPCR results. M11.6, M11.4, M11.13 and M11.14 only carried a chromium-reducing gene such as nemA or azoR but not contain chromium transporter genes (chrA and srpC), which might not be involved in the reduction of chromate. In addition, genes related to DNA protection

ro of

pathway (recAG, ruvAB, and lexR) were found in lots of MAGs, which protected cells from ROS attack.

In summary, our results suggest that NO3- and Cr(VI) can be reduced efficiently by

-p

the co-metabolism of bacterial communities, and the coordination between different

re

bacteria is essential for complete reduction of nitrate and chromium simultaneously. 4. Conclusions

lP

This study clarified the mechanisms of simultaneous nitrate and chromate reduction

na

with bacteria, which probed the biogeochemical cycle of nitrogen and chromium in aquifers at different initial pH conditions with the participation of microorganisms. The

ur

survival of microorganisms depended on initial pH conditions. Different initial pH values made the shape and dominant species of the microorganisms different, which

Jo

caused the microorganisms to show large differences in behavior under different initial pHs with 0.0014, 0.0016, 0.0045, 0.0256, 0.0892, and 0.0015 h-1 for nitrate reduction kinetic constant and 0.0015, 0.0018, 0.002, 0.0202, 0.0296, and 0.0013 h-1 for Cr(VI) reduction kinetic constant. Significant increments in metabolic pathways relative abundance (up to 40 folds) and relative expression level of functional genes (up to 10 18

folds) were observed in samples from pH 10.0 and 11.0 conditions, compared to the represent values from other pH conditions. To sum up, the above differences explained clearly why the removal efficiency was as high as 99.8% at initial pH of 10.0 and 11.0, but it was below 30% at other pHs. At the same time, the analysis of bins showed that potential inter-species cooperation under alkaline conditions had great potential to

(such as nitrate and chromate) in alkaline groundwater.

-p

Author contribution statement

ro of

remove complex pollutants, which provided a reference for remediation of co-pollutants

Yutian Hu and Nan Chen conceived the idea and designed the research; Yutian Hu, Tong

re

Liu, Linlin Ma, and Chen Si performed the experiment; Yutian Hu and Tong Liu

lP

analyzed data; Yutian Hu draft the manuscript; Yutian Hu, Nan Chen, Chuanping Feng, and Miao Li consulting the results, and revised the manuscript.

na

Conflict of interest

ur

We declare that we do not have any commercial or associative interest that represents a

Jo

conflict of interest in connection with the work submitted.

Declarations of interest: none Declaration of Competing Interest There is no competing interest to declare.

Acknowledgments 19

The authors acknowledge financial support from the Major Science and Technology Program for Water Pollution Control and Treatment (No.2017ZX07202002) and the

Jo

ur

na

lP

re

-p

ro of

National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) (No. 21876159).

20

Reference Ackerley, D.F., Barak, Y., Lynch, S.V., Curtin, J., Matin, A., 2006. Effect of Chromate Stress

on

Escherichia

coli

K-12.

J.

Bacteriol.

188,

3371–3381.

https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.188.9.3371-3381.2006 Alvarez, A., Moreno-Sanchez, R., Cervantes, C., 2000. Chromate Efflux by Means of the ChrA Chromate Resistance Protein from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. J.

ro of

Bacteriol. 181, 7398–400. Bai, H., Liao, S., Wang, A., Huang, J., Shu, W., Ye, J., 2019. High-efficiency inorganic nitrogen removal by newly isolated Pannonibacter phragmitetus B1. Bioresour.

-p

Technol. 271, 91–99. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2018.09.090

re

Bhattacharya, A., Gupta, A., Kaur, A., Malik, D., 2019. Alleviation of hexavalent chromium by using microorganisms: insight into the strategies and complications.

lP

Water Sci. Technol. 79, 411–424. https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2019.060 Chai, L., Ding, C., Li, J., Yang, Z., Shi, Y., 2019. Multi-omics response of Pannonibacter

na

phragmitetus BB to hexavalent chromium. Environ. Pollut. 249, 63–73.

ur

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2019.03.005 Chen, C., Ma, T., Shang, Y., Gao, B., Jin, B., Dan, H., Li, Q., Yue, Q., Li, Y., Wang, Y.,

Jo

Xu, X., 2019. In-situ pyrolysis of Enteromorpha as carbocatalyst for catalytic removal of organic contaminants: Considering the intrinsic N/Fe in Enteromorpha and non-radical reaction. Appl. Catal. B Environ. 250, 382–395. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2019.03.048 Chen, G., Han, J., Mu, Y., Yu, H., Qin, L., 2019. Two-stage chromium isotope 21

fractionation during microbial Cr(VI) reduction. Water Res. 148, 10–18. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2018.09.034 Cheung, K.H., Gu, J.-D., 2007. Mechanism of hexavalent chromium detoxification by microorganisms and bioremediation application potential: A review. Int. Biodeterior. Biodegrad. 59, 8–15. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibiod.2006.05.002 Dhal, B., Thatoi, H.N., Das, N.N., Pandey, B.D., 2013. Chemical and microbial of

hexavalent

chromium

from

contaminated

soil

and

ro of

remediation

mining/metallurgical solid waste: A review. J. Hazard. Mater. 250–251, 272–291. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2013.01.048

-p

Du, W., Zhang, Q., Shang, Y., Wang, W., Li, Q., Yue, Q., Gao, B., Xu, X., 2020. Sulfate

re

saturated biosorbent-derived Co-S@NC nanoarchitecture as an efficient catalyst for peroxymonosulfate activation. Appl. Catal. B Environ. 262, 118302.

lP

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2019.118302

na

Duan, P., Ma, T., Yue, Y., Li, Y., Zhang, X., Shang, Y., Gao, B., Zhang, Q., Yue, Q., Xu, X., 2019. Fe/Mn nanoparticles encapsulated in nitrogen-doped carbon

ur

nanotubes as a peroxymonosulfate activator for acetamiprid degradation. Environ. Sci. Nano 6, 1799–1811. https://doi.org/10.1039/C9EN00220K

Jo

Duan, P., Qi, Y., Feng, S., Peng, X., Wang, W., Yue, Y., Shang, Y., Li, Y., Gao, B., Xu, X., 2020. Enhanced degradation of clothianidin in Peroxymonosulfate/catalyst system via core-shell FeMn @ N-C and phosphate surrounding. Appl. Catal. B Environ. 118717. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2020.118717 Fan, C., Wang, P., Zhou, W., Wu, S., He, S., Huang, J., Cao, L., 2018. The influence of 22

phosphorus on the autotrophic and mixotrophic denitrification. Sci. Total Environ. 643, 127–133. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.06.185 Gan, Y., Zhao, Q., Ye, Z., 2019. Denitrification performance and microbial diversity of immobilized bacterial consortium treating nitrate micro-polluted water. Bioresour.

Technol.

281,

351–358.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2019.02.111

ro of

Han, H., Song, B., Song, M.J., Yoon, S., 2019. Enhanced nitrous oxide production in

denitrifying Dechloromonas aromatica strain RCB under salt or alkaline stress conditions. Front. Microbiol. 10. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2019.01203

-p

Hausladen, D.M., Alexander-Ozinskas, A., McClain, C., Fendorf, S., 2018. Hexavalent

re

Chromium Sources and Distribution in California Groundwater. Environ. Sci. Technol. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.7b06627

lP

He, M., Li, X., Guo, L., Miller, S.J., Rensing, C., Wang, G., 2010. Characterization and

na

genomic analysis of chromate resistant and reducing Bacillus cereus strain SJ1. BMC Microbiol. 10, 221. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-10-221

ur

He, Y., Gong, Y., Su, Y., Zhang, Y., Zhou, X., 2019. Bioremediation of Cr (VI) contaminated groundwater by Geobacter sulfurreducens: Environmental factors electron

Jo

and

transfer

flow

studies.

Chemosphere

221,

793–801.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.01.039

Henderson, S.L., Dandie, C.E., Patten, C.L., Zebarth, B.J., Burton, D.L., Trevors, J.T., Goyer, C., 2010. Changes in Denitrifier Abundance, Denitrification Gene mRNA Levels, Nitrous Oxide Emissions, and Denitrification in Anoxic Soil Microcosms 23

Amended with Glucose and Plant Residues. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 76, 2155– 2164. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02993-09 Hug, L., C Thomas, B., Sharon, I., T Brown, C., Sharma, R., Hettich, R., Wilkins, M., H Williams, K., Singh, A., F Banfield, J., 2015. Critical biogeochemical functions in the subsurface are associated with bacteria from new phyla and little studied lineages: N- and C-cycling organisms in the subsurface. Environ.

ro of

Microbiol. 18. https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.12930

Ito T., Aoi T., Miyazato N., Hatamoto M., Fuchigami S., Yamaguchi T., Watanabe Y.,

2019. Diversity and abundance of denitrifying bacteria in a simultaneously

-p

nitrifying and denitrifying rotating biological contactor treating real wastewater

re

at low temperatures. H2Open J. 2, 58–70. https://doi.org/10.2166/h2oj.2019.021 Jiang, Y., Yang, K., Shang, Y., Zhang, H., Wei, L., Wang, H., 2019. Response and

and

nitrogen.

Chemosphere

221,

366–374.

na

aniline

lP

recovery of aerobic granular sludge to pH shock for simultaneous removal of

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.12.207

ur

Jobby, R., Jha, P., Yadav, A.K., Desai, N., 2018. Biosorption and biotransformation of hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)]: A comprehensive review. Chemosphere 207,

Jo

255–266. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.05.050

Kim, H., Park, D., Yoon, S., 2017. pH Control Enables Simultaneous Enhancement of Nitrogen Retention and N2O Reduction in Shewanella loihica Strain PV-4. Front. Microbiol. 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01820 Liu B., Mørkved P.T., Frostegård Å., Bakken L.R., 2010. Denitrification gene pools, 24

transcription and kinetics of NO, N2O and N2 production as affected by soil pH. FEMS

Microbiol.

Ecol.

72,

407–417.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-

6941.2010.00856.x Lovley, D.R., 1995. Bioremediation of organic and metal contaminants with dissimilatory

metal

reduction.

J.

Ind.

Microbiol.

14,

85–93.

https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01569889

ro of

Lovley, D.R., 1993. Dissimilatory Metal Reduction. Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 47, 263–290. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.mi.47.100193.001403

Lund P., Tramonti A., De Biase D., 2014. Coping with low pH: molecular strategies in bacteria.

FEMS

Microbiol.

38,

1091–1125.

re

https://doi.org/10.1111/1574-6976.12076

Rev.

-p

neutralophilic

Lyon, D.Y., Alvarez, P.J.J., 2008. Fullerene Water Suspension (nC60) Exerts

lP

Antibacterial Effects via ROS-Independent Protein Oxidation. Environ. Sci.

na

Technol. 42, 8127–8132. https://doi.org/10.1021/es801869m Ma, L., Xu, J., Chen, N., Li, M., Feng, C., 2019. Microbial reduction fate of chromium

ur

(Cr) in aqueous solution by mixed bacterial consortium. Ecotoxicol. Environ. Saf. 170, 763–770. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoenv.2018.12.041

Jo

Mary Mangaiyarkarasi, M.S., Vincent, S., Janarthanan, S., Subba Rao, T., Tata, B.V.R., 2011. Bioreduction of Cr(VI) by alkaliphilic Bacillus subtilis and interaction of the

membrane

groups.

Saudi

J.

Biol.

Sci.

18,

157–167.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sjbs.2010.12.003 Misal, S.A., Gawai, K.R., 2018. Azoreductase: a key player of xenobiotic metabolism. 25

Bioresour. Bioprocess. 5, 17. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40643-018-0206-8 Nieder, R., Benbi, D.K., Reichl, F.X., 2018. Reactive Water-Soluble Forms of Nitrogen and Phosphorus and Their Impacts on Environment and Human Health, in: Nieder, R., Benbi, D.K., Reichl, F.X. (Eds.), Soil Components and Human Health.

Springer

Netherlands,

Dordrecht,

pp.

223–255.

https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-024-1222-2_5

ro of

Qi, Y., Guo, C., Xu, X., Gao, B., Yue, Q., Jiang, B., Qian, Z., Wang, C., Zhang, Y., 2020. Co/Fe and Co/Al layered double oxides ozone catalyst for the deep degradation

of aniline: Preparation, characterization and kinetic model. Sci. Total Environ.

-p

715, 136982. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.136982

re

Romaniuk, K., Ciok, A., Decewicz, P., Uhrynowski, W., Budzik, K., Nieckarz, M., Pawlowska, J., Zdanowski, M.K., Bartosik, D., Dziewit, L., 2018. Insight into

Island

(Antarctica).

Polar

Biol.

41,

1319–1333.

na

George

lP

heavy metal resistome of soil psychrotolerant bacteria originating from King

https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-018-2287-4

ur

Sayel, H., Bahafid, W., Tahri Joutey, N., Derraz, K., Fikri Benbrahim, K., Ibnsouda Koraichi, S., El Ghachtouli, N., 2012. Cr(VI) reduction by Enterococcus

Jo

gallinarum isolated from tannery waste-contaminated soil. Ann. Microbiol. 62, 1269–1277. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13213-011-0372-9

Shang, Y., Chen, C., Zhang, P., Yue, Q., Li, Y., Gao, B., Xu, X., 2019. Removal of sulfamethoxazole from water via activation of persulfate by Fe3C@NCNTs including mechanism of radical and nonradical process. Chem. Eng. J. 375, 26

122004. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2019.122004 Šimek, M., Jı́šová, L., Hopkins, D.W., 2002. What is the so-called optimum pH for denitrification

in

soil?

Soil

Biol.

Biochem.

34,

1227–1234.

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0038-0717(02)00059-7 Sotres, A., Cerrillo, M., Viñas, M., Bonmatí, A., 2016. Nitrogen removal in a twochambered microbial fuel cell: Establishment of a nitrifying–denitrifying

905–916. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2015.08.100

ro of

microbial community on an intermittent aerated cathode. Chem. Eng. J. 284,

Sun, F.-L., Fan, L.-L., Wang, Y.-S., Huang, L.-Y., 2019. Metagenomic analysis of the

A2O

sludge.

J.

Hazard.

Mater.

368,

523–529.

re

in

-p

inhibitory effect of chromium on microbial communities and removal efficiency

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2019.01.076

lP

Thatoi, H., Das, S., Mishra, J., Rath, B.P., Das, N., 2014. Bacterial chromate reductase,

na

a potential enzyme for bioremediation of hexavalent chromium: A review. J. Environ. Manage. 146, 383–399. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.07.014

ur

Tu, W., Zhang, D., Wang, H., Lin, Z., 2019. Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) production from fermented thermal-hydrolyzed sludge by PHA-storing denitrifiers

Jo

integrating PHA accumulation with nitrate removal. Bioresour. Technol. 292, 121895. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2019.121895

Vijay, A., Chhabra, M., Vincent, T., 2019. Microbial community modulates electrochemical performance and denitrification rate in a biocathodic autotrophic and heterotrophic denitrifying microbial fuel cell. Bioresour. Technol. 272, 217– 27

225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2018.10.030 Vilardi, G., 2019. Mathematical modelling of simultaneous nitrate and dissolved oxygen reduction by Cu-nZVI using a bi-component shrinking core model. Powder Technol. 343, 613–618. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.powtec.2018.11.082 Vilardi, G., Bubbico, R., Di Palma, L., Verdone, N., 2020. Nitrate green removal by fixed-bed columns packed with waste biomass: Modelling and friction parameter Chem.

Eng.

Res.

Des.

154,

250–261.

ro of

estimation.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cherd.2019.12.020

Vilardi, G., Di Palma, L., Verdone, N., 2019. A physical-based interpretation of

nanoparticles.

Chemosphere

220,

590–599.

re

iron

-p

mechanism and kinetics of Cr(VI) reduction in aqueous solution by zero-valent

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2018.12.175

lP

Vilardi, G., Ochando-Pulido, J.M., Stoller, M., Verdone, N., Di Palma, L., 2018. Fenton

na

oxidation and chromium recovery from tannery wastewater by means of ironbased coated biomass as heterogeneous catalyst in fixed-bed columns. Chem.

ur

Eng. J. 351, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2018.06.095 Wang, C., Liu, S., Xu, X., Guo, Y., Yang, F., Wang, D., 2018. Role of cyclic diguanylate

Jo

in affecting microbial community shifts at different pH during the operation of simultaneous partial nitrification, anammox and denitrification process. Sci. Total

Environ.

637–638,

155–162.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.05.015 Xu, L., Luo, M., Li, W., Wei, X., Xie, K., Liu, L., Jiang, C., Liu, H., 2011. Reduction of 28

hexavalent chromium by Pannonibacter phragmitetus LSSE-09 stimulated with external electron donors under alkaline conditions. J. Hazard. Mater. 185, LZ-4. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2010.10.028 Zeng, D., Miao, J., Wu, G., Zhan, X., 2018. Nitrogen removal, microbial community and electron transport in an integrated nitrification and denitrification system for

209. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibiod.2018.07.014

ro of

ammonium-rich wastewater treatment. Int. Biodeterior. Biodegrad. 133, 202–

Zhao, J., Feng, C., Tong, S., Chen, N., Dong, S., Peng, T., Jin, S., 2018. Denitrification

behavior and microbial community spatial distribution inside woodchip-based

Bioresour.

Technol.

249,

869–879.

re

treatment.

-p

solid-phase denitrification (W-SPD) bioreactor for nitrate-contaminated water

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2017.11.011

lP

Zimmermann, R., Iturriaga, R., Becker-Birck, J., 1978. Simultaneous Determination of

na

the Total Number of Aquatic Bacteria and the Number Thereof Involved in

Jo

ur

Respiration. APPL Env. MICROBIOL 36, 926–935.

29

ro of -p re lP na

ur

Figure 1. Effect of the initial pH on the synchronous nitrate and Cr(VI) removal (a) the

Jo

first-order-kinetic k value of nitrate, (b) the first-order-kinetic k value of Cr(VI), (c) the accumulation of nitrite, (d) the carbon source utilization, (e) the ETSA values, and (f) the Cyt C relative concentration.

30

ro of

-p

Figure 2. Microbial community compositions and functional species revealed by sequencing the microbial samples, before and after the experiment by (a) phylum-level

Jo

ur

na

lP

re

abundance, (b) genus-level abundance, and (c) functional bacterial genera.

31

ro of -p re lP na

ur

Figure 3. The different metabolic pathway relative abundance including Degradation (a),

Jo

Energy supply (b), Response to Stimulus (c), and Cellular Processes (d) and relative expression level of genes associated with reducing nitrate and chromate (e) in a system of simultaneous nitrate and Cr(VI) removal by microorganisms at different pH values.

32

ro of -p

Jo

ur

na

lP

re

Figure 4. A co-metabolic model of a nitrate-Cr(VI)-reducing bacterial community based on genomic bins generated from metagenomic data at initial pH 11.0.

33