Abstract

The nitrogen removal efficiency of heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification (HN-AD) bacteria can be seriously inhibited at low temperatures (< 15°C). A novel psychrotolerant bacterium, Pseudomonas peli NR-5 (P. peli NR-5), with efficient HN-AD capability was isolated and screened from river sediments in cold areas. When P. peli NR-5 was aerobically cultivated for 60h at 10°C with NH4+-N, NO3--N, and NO2--N as the sole nitrogen sources (N 105mg/L), the nitrogen removal efficiencies were 97.3, 95.3, and 87.8%, respectively, without nitrite accumulation, and the corresponding average nitrogen removal rates were 1.71, 1.67, and 1.55mg/L/h, respectively. Meanwhile, P. peli NR-5 exhibited excellent simultaneous nitrification and denitrification capabilities at 10°C. Sodium succinate was the most favorable carbon substrate for bacterial growth and ammonia removal by strain NR-5. The optimal culture conditions determined by the response surface methodology model were a carbon to nitrogen ratio of 5.9, temperature of 11.5°C, pH of 7.0, and shaking speed of 144rpm. Under these conditions, 99.1% of the total nitrogen was removed in the verification experiments, which was not significantly different from the predicted maximum removal in the model (99.6%). Six functional genes participating in the HN-AD process were successfully obtained by polymerase chain reaction amplification, which further confirmed the HN-AD capability of P. peli NR-5 and proposed the metabolic pathway of HN-AD. The above results provide a theoretical background of psychrotolerant HN-AD bacteria in wastewater purification under low-temperature conditions.

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