Abstract

BackgroundBiofuel production from conversion of biomass is indispensable in the portfolio of renewable energies. Complex microbial communities are involved in the anaerobic digestion process of plant material, agricultural residual products and food wastes. Analysis of the genetic potential and microbiology of communities degrading biomass to biofuels is considered to be the key to develop process optimisation strategies. Hence, due to the still incomplete taxonomic and functional characterisation of corresponding communities, new and unknown species are of special interest.ResultsThree mesophilic and one thermophilic production-scale biogas plants (BGPs) were taxonomically profiled using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. All BGPs shared a core microbiome with the thermophilic BGP featuring the lowest diversity. However, the phyla Cloacimonetes and Spirochaetes were unique to BGPs 2 and 3, Fusobacteria were only found in BGP3 and members of the phylum Thermotogae were present only in the thermophilic BGP4. Taxonomic analyses revealed that these distinctive taxa mostly represent so far unknown species. The only exception is the dominant Thermotogae OTU featuring 16S rRNA gene sequence identity to Defluviitoga tunisiensis L3, a sequenced and characterised strain. To further investigate the genetic potential of the biogas communities, corresponding metagenomes were sequenced in a deepness of 347.5 Gbp in total. A combined assembly comprised 80.3 % of all reads and resulted in the prediction of 1.59 million genes on assembled contigs. Genome binning yielded genome bins comprising the prevalent distinctive phyla Cloacimonetes, Spirochaetes, Fusobacteria and Thermotogae. Comparative genome analyses between the most dominant Thermotogae bin and the very closely related Defluviitogatunisiensis L3 genome originating from the same BGP revealed high genetic similarity. This finding confirmed applicability and reliability of the binning approach. The four highly covered genome bins of the other three distinct phyla showed low or very low genetic similarities to their closest phylogenetic relatives, and therefore indicated their novelty.ConclusionsIn this study, the 16S rRNA gene sequencing approach and a combined metagenome assembly and binning approach were used for the first time on different production-scale biogas plants and revealed insights into the genetic potential and functional role of so far unknown species.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13068-016-0565-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Biofuel production from conversion of biomass is indispensable in the portfolio of renewable energies

  • Parameters of the three mesophilic and one thermophilic industrial biogas plants analysed In this study, four different production-scale biogas plants (BGPs) were compared on taxonomic and functional level, based on high-throughput 16S rDNA amplicon and ultra-deep metagenome sequencing

  • The main fermenters of the biogas plants BGP1, BGP2 and BGP3 are continuously stirred tank reactors (CSTRs), while in the thermophilic BGP4 mixing of the substrate is achieved by pumping it through the reactor

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Summary

Introduction

Biofuel production from conversion of biomass is indispensable in the portfolio of renewable energies. Complex microbial communities are involved in the anaerobic digestion process of plant material, agricultural residual products and food wastes. Analysis of the genetic potential and microbiology of communities degrading biomass to biofuels is considered to be the key to develop process optimisation strategies. Within the agricultural sector of renewable energy sources, energy generation by decomposition of organic materials has become one of the most important techniques. Organic material is anaerobically decomposed by complex consortia of microorganisms. Several studies investigated and characterised the microbial community composition of agricultural biogas reactors. Among the bacterial community members, those of the classes Clostridia and Bacteroidetes dominate the biogas microbial subcommunities, followed by Proteobacteria, Bacilli, Flavobacteria, Spirochaetes and Erysipelotrichi. Within the domain Archaea, the methanogenic orders Methanomicrobiales, Methanosarcinales and Methanobacteriales were described to be frequently dominant [3,4,5,6,7,8]

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