Abstract

17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2) is a synthetic estrogen that can cause harmful effects on animals, such as male feminization and infertility. However, the impact of the EE2 contamination on microbial communities and the potential role of bacterial strains as bioremediation agents are underexplored. The aim of this work was to evaluate the impact of EE2 on the microbial community dynamics of aerated submerged fixed-film reactors (ASFFR) simulating a polishing step downstream of a secondary sewage treatment. For this purpose, the reactors were fed with a synthetic medium with low COD content (around 50 mg l−1), supplemented (reactor H) or not (reactor C) with 1 μg l−1 of EE2. Sludge samples were periodically collected during the bioreactors operation to assess the bacterial profile over time by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing or by bacterial isolation using culture-dependent approach. The results revealed that the most abundant phyla in both reactors were Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes. At genus level, Chitinophagaceae, Nitrosomonas and Bdellovibrio predominated. Significant effects caused by EE2 treatment and bioreactors operating time were observed by non-metric multidimensional scaling. Therefore, even at low concentrations as 1 μg l−1, EE2 is capable of influencing the bioreactor microbiome. Culture-dependent methods showed that six bacterial isolates, closely related to Pseudomonas and Acinetobacter genera, could grow on EE2 as the sole carbon source under aerobic conditions. These organisms may potentially be used for the assembly of an EE2-degrading bacterial consortium and further exploited for bioremediation applications, including tertiary sewage treatment to remove hormone-related compounds not metabolized in secondary depuration stages.

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