作者
Bing Yan,Jiaqi Fu,Song Xia,Qi-Zhen Yi,Su Gui,WU Jiu-jiu,Jie Xiong,Yuansong Wei
摘要
Bacterial communities are vital for efficient nitrogen removal in an anaerobic ammonium oxidation (ANAMMOX) system. However, the diversity and functional characteristics of a bacterial community during the start-up of ANAMMOX has not been reported. In this study, an up-flow anaerobic sludge bed reactor was used to start-up the ANAMMOX system, and 16S rRNA high-throughput gene sequencing, combined with PICRUSt2-based functional prediction analysis, was used to investigate the dynamic changes in diversity and function of the bacterial community at different times (d0, d30, d60, and d90) during the start-up. The results showed that 48 phyla, 111 classes, 269 orders, 457 families, 840 genera, and 1497 species were present during the start-up of ANAMMOX. Candidatus Brocadia and Candidatus_Kuenenia were the main detected ANAMMOX bacteria, and their relative abundance was significantly different at different times during the start-up of ANAMMOX (P<0.05). During the start-up, the alpha diversity indices of the bacterial community were significantly decreased (P<0.05), and the structure of the bacterial community exhibited significant spatial differentiation (R=0.846, P<0.01). Functional prediction analysis with PICRUSt2 revealed that the bacterial community was active in organic systems and metabolism at hierarchy level 1, implying abundant functional diversity. Further, the abundance of functional genes was significantly different at hierarchy level 2, during the start-up of ANAMMOX. Forty-nine functional genes involving metabolic nitrogen were detected. The abundance of functional genes, involved in nitrification, denitrification, ANAMMOX, and nitrate and nitrite assimilatory/dissimilatory reduction, changed significantly during the start-up of ANAMMOX.