Abstract

Anaerobic digestion (AD) of cow manure (CM) has been extensively implemented for simultaneous waste disposal and biogas generation. Within this criteria, AD co-digestion of CM and sheep manure (SM) was proved a viable approach for improved methane production. However, concrete evidence regarding the relationship between substrate catabolism and microbial metabolism is lacking, hindering the understanding of the merits of co-digestion. This study adopted metatranscriptomics to unveil critical metabolisms in the co-digestion scenario. Co-digestion significantly improved cellulase activity (CM + SM: 1.031; CM alone: 0.485–0.675) in lignocellulose hydrolysis. Concurrently, the introduction of SM promoted variable enzymes in protein metabolism (serine and cysteine) to intermediates (pyruvate and Acetyl-CoA) in acidogenesis and acetogenesis. Consequently, co-digestion rendered the improved Coenzyme-B sulfoethylthiotransferase activity (CM + SM: 3.883; CM alone: 1.702–1.864), thus excellent methanogenesis (20% improvement compared with CM alone). The results emphasized that co-digestion of CM and SM improved lignocellulose and certain protein hydrolysis to intermediates, thus enhancing methanogenesis.

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