Abstract

Though sulfamethoxazole (SMX) degradation at the low or medium concentration (SMX< 30 mg/L) has been reported in the microbial fuel cell (MFC), further exploration is still urgently required to investigate how the high concentration of SMX affect the anode biofilm formation. In this study, the degradation mechanism of SMX and the response of microbial community to SMX at different initial concentrations (0, 0.5, 5 and 50 mg/L) were investigated in MFCs. The highest SMX removal efficiency of 98.4% was obtained in MFC (5 mg/L). SMX at optimal concentration (5 mg/L) could serve as substrate accelerating the extracellular electron transfer. However, high concentration of SMX (50 mg/L) conferred significant inhibition on the electron transfer with SMX removal decline to 84.4%. The 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing revealed the significant shift of the anode biofilms communities with different initial SMX concentrations were observed in MFCs. Thauera and Geobacter were the predominant genus, with relative abundance of 31.9% in MFC (50 mg/L SMX) and 52.7% in MFC (5 mg/L SMX). Methylophilus exhibited a huge increase with the highest percentage of 16.4% in MFC (50 mg/L). Hence, the functional bacteria of Thauera, Geobacter and Methylophilus endowed significant tolerance to the selection pressure from high concentration of SMX in MFCs. Meanwhile, some bacteria including Ornatilinea, Dechloromonas and Longilinea exhibited a decrease or even disappeared in MFCs. Therefore, initial concentrations of SMX played a fundamental role in modifying the relative abundance of predominant populations. This finding would promote theories support for understanding the evolution of anode biofilm formation related to the different initial concentrations of SMX in MFCs.

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