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Appl Environ Microbiol, March 1998, p. 992-998, Vol. 64, No. 3
Department of Ecological Engineering,
Received 8 September 1997/Accepted 4 December 1997
Respiratory quinones were used as biomarkers to study bacterial
community structures in activated sludge reactors used for enhanced
biological phosphate removal (EBPR). We compared the quinone profiles
of EBPR sludges and standard sludges, of natural sewage and synthetic
sewage, and of plant scale and laboratory scale systems. Ubiquinone (Q)
and menaquinone (MK) components were detected in all sludges tested at
molar MK/Q ratios of 0.455 to 0.981. The differences in MK/Q ratios
were much larger when we compared different wastewater sludges (i.e.,
raw sewage and synthetic sewage) than when we compared sludges from the
EBPR and standard processes or plant scale and laboratory scale
systems. In all sludges tested a Q with eight isoprene units (Q-8) was the most abundant quinone. In the MK fraction, either tetrahydrogenated MK-8 or MK-7 was the predominant type, and there was also a significant proportion of MK-6 to MK-8 in most cases. A numerical cluster analysis
of the profiles showed that the sludges tested fell into two major
clusters; one included all raw sewage sludges, and the other consisted
of all synthetic sewage sludges, independent of the operational mode
and scale of the reactors and the phosphate accumulation. These data
suggested that Q-8-containing species belonging to the class
Proteobacteria (i.e., species belonging to the beta
subclass) were the major constituents of the bacterial populations in
the EBPR sludge, as well as in standard activated sludge. Members of
the class Actinobacteria (gram-positive bacteria with high
DNA G+C contents) were the second most abundant group in both types of
sludge. The bacterial community structures in activated sludge
processes may be affected more by the nature of the influent wastewater
than by the introduction of an anaerobic stage into the process or by
the scale of the reactors.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Quinone Profiling of Bacterial Communities in Natural and
Synthetic Sewage Activated Sludge for Enhanced Phosphate
Removal
and
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Ecological Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology,
Tenpaku-cho, Toyohashi 441, Japan. Phone: 81-532-44-6913. Fax:
81-532-44-6929. E-mail: hiraishi{at}eco.tut.ac.jp.
Present address: Tama Laboratory, Japan Food Research Laboratories,
Tama 206, Japan.
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