Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Jul 1996, 2421-2426, Vol 62, No. 7
S Otte, NG Grobben, LA Robertson, MS Jetten and JG Kuenen
Nitrous oxide can be a harmful by-product in nitrogen removal from
wastewater. Since wastewater treatment systems operate under different
aeration regimens, the influence of different oxygen concentrations and
oxygen fluctuations on denitrification was studied. Continuous cultures of
Alcaligenes faecalis TUD produced N2O under anaerobic as well as aerobic
conditions. Below a dissolved oxygen concentration of 5% air saturation,
the relatively highest N2O production was observed. Under these conditions,
significant activities of nitrite reductase could be measured. After
transition from aerobic to anaerobic conditions, there was insufficient
nitrite reductase present to sustain growth and the culture began to wash
out. After 20 h, nitrite reductase became detectable and the culture
started to recover. Nitrous oxide reductase became measurable only after 27
h, suggesting sequential induction of the denitrification reductases,
causing the transient accumulation of N2O. After transition from anaerobic
conditions to aerobic conditions, nitrite reduction continued (at a lower
rate) for several hours. N2O reduction appeared to stop immediately after
the switch, indicating inhibition of nitrous oxide reductase, resulting in
high N2O emissions (maximum, 1.4 mmol liter-1 h-1). The nitrite reductase
was not inactivated by oxygen, but its synthesis was repressed. A half-life
of 16 to 22 h for nitrite reductase under these conditions was calculated.
In a dynamic aerobic-anaerobic culture of A. faecalis, a semisteady state
in which most of the N2O production took place after the transition from
anaerobic to aerobic conditions was obtained. The nitrite consumption rate
in this culture was equal to that in an anaerobic culture (0.95 and 0.92
mmol liter-1 h-1, respectively), but the production of N2O was higher in
the dynamic culture (28 and 26% of nitrite consumption, respectively).
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Nitrous oxide production by Alcaligenes faecalis under transient and dynamic aerobic and anaerobic conditions
Kluyver Laboratory for Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands.
This article has been cited by other articles:
| J. Bacteriol. | Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. | Eukaryot. Cell | All ASM Journals |
|---|