Abstract

As obligate anaerobes, anammox bacteria are sensitive to oxygen, which might hinder the maximization of anammox activity. However, there are very few effective strategies to rapidly recover anammox activity after its deterioration under exposure of oxygen. In this study, the activity recovery of anammox bacteria encountering dissolved oxygen (DO) exposure (0.2 and 2.0 mg L−1) were compared by three strategies in short-term experiments, nZVI, Fe(II) dosing, and N2 purging. nZVI is more effective in recovering anammox activity with a high DO exposure (2 mg L−1), compared to a low DO exposure (0.2 mg L−1). After inhibiting by 2.0 mg L−1 DO, anammox activity recovery (normalized to the control) was ranked in the order of nZVI (5 mg L−1) addition (63 ± 8.2%) > Fe(II) (5 mg L−1) addition (41 ± 8.0%) >N2 purging (39 ± 4.0%). In contrast to Fe(II) ion additions, the shell structure of nZVI combined with the buffering effect of biomass-extracellular polysaccharide (EPS) prevented the sharp pH variation and excessive dissolved Fe(II)/Fe(III) in solution. Under such circumstances, nZVI addition (5 and 25 mg L−1) increased the intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) to a moderate level (<200%), which might be responsible for the better activity recovery of anammox than that of Fe(II) addition and N2 purging. Specifically, 5 mg L−1 nZVI dosage moderately enhanced the intracellular O2− production (∼150% of the control) after scavenging 2.0 mg L−1 DO, and the anammox activity recovered better than that of both 5 and 25 mg L−1 Fe(II) ions additions. However, high dosage nZVI (75 mg L−1) inhibited anammox activity in spite of low or high DO exposure. Our findings elucidate that appropriate amount of nZVI (short-term dosing) can rapidly recover anammox activity when anammox bacteria encountering oxygen exposure accidentally and could be useful in facilitating the robust operation of anammox-based processes.

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