Abstract

In a staged anaerobic fluidized-bed ceramic membrane bioreactor, metagenomic and metatranscriptomic analyses were performed to decipher the microbial interactions on the granular activated carbon. Metagenome bins, representing the predominating microbes in the bioreactor: syntrophic propionate-oxidizing bacteria (SPOB), acetoclastic Methanothrix concilii, and exoelectrogenic Geobacter lovleyi, were successfully recovered for the reconstruction and analysis of metabolic pathways involved in the transformation of fatty acids to methane. In particular, SPOB degraded propionate into acetate, which was further converted into methane and CO2 by M. concilii via the acetoclastic methanogenesis. Concurrently, G. lovleyi oxidized acetate into CO2, releasing electrons into the extracellular environment. By accepting these electrons through direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET), M. concilii was capable of performing CO2 reduction for further methane formation. Most notably, an alternative RuBisCO-mediated CO2 reduction (the reductive hexulose-phosphate (RHP) pathway) is transcriptionally-active in M. concilii. This RHP pathway enables M. concilii dominance and energy gain by carbon fixation and methanogenesis, respectively via a methyl-H4MPT intermediate, constituting the third methanogenesis route. The complete acetate reduction (2 mole methane formation/1 mole acetate consumption), coupling of acetoclastic methanogenesis and two CO2 reduction pathways, are thermodynamically favorable even under very low substrate condition (down to to 10−5 M level). Such tight interactions via both mediated and direct interspecies electron transfer (MIET and DIET), induced by the conductive GAC promote the overall efficiency of bioenergy processes.

Highlights

  • Energy recovery in the form of methane with sewage is of great interest[1]

  • Effluent produced by anaerobic fluidized bed bioreactor (AFBR) was treated further by anaerobic fluidized bed ceramic membrane bioreactor (AFCMBR), termed as staged, anaerobic fluidized bed ceramic membrane bioreactor (SAF-CMBR)

  • AFBR and AFCMBR in the SFA-CMBR were predominated by syntrophic propionate oxidizing bacteria (SPOB) (Syntrophobacter and Smithella), acetoclastic methanogens (Methanothrix), and the exoelectrogen Geobacter[8]

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Summary

Results and Discussion

Overview of the Metagenome Bin and Metatranscriptomes. GAC microbial communities of both. The genes involved were found to be highly expressed in the genome bin (log[2] RPKM values of 5.45–11.96) (Table S4; Fig. 1), indicating that M. concilii was metabolically active and contributed to the methane production via its acetoclastic methanogenesis pathway. All the genes involved in the RHP pathway were at high expression levels as the acetoclastic and classical DIET-dependent CO2 methanogenesis pathways with log[2] RPKM values ranging between 6.05 and 9.79 (Fig. 1; Table S3). This provides the first definitive proof that the entire RHP pathway is metabolically active in M. concilii. All the three reactions were thermodynamically feasible under this SFA-CMBR even at very low substrate

Description of reaction Acetate methanogenesis
Methods
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