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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2007, p. 4892-4904, Vol. 73, No. 15
0099-2240/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00331-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Fares Z. Najar,4
Bruce A. Roe,4
David C. White,2 and
Lee R. Krumholz1*
Department of Botany and Microbiology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma,1 Center for Biomarker Analysis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee,2 Department of Civil Engineering, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon,3 Advanced Center for Genome Technology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma4
Received 9 February 2007/ Accepted 30 May 2007
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Microbial communities stimulated to reduce U(VI) via electron donor addition have been studied using both in situ and microcosm experiments. Members of the Geobacteraceae family have been stimulated during uranium reduction in contaminated sediments from Shiprock, NM (33), Rifle, CO (3, 12), and Oak Ridge, TN (51, 54). From studies done with sediment from Oak Ridge, Anaeromyxobacter was also stimulated under metal-reducing conditions (51, 55). In other studies, sulfate-reducing bacteria have been linked to uranium reduction (1, 13, 49, 52, 61). Of these, two studies have also found Clostridium to be associated with U(VI) reduction (52, 61), and another found that Pseudomonas was also stimulated upon uranium removal in high-salinity sediment (49).
At the DOE Field Research Center (FRC) in Oak Ridge, TN, where groundwater contains >130 mM nitrate and micromolar concentrations of uranium, addition of a biodegradable electron donor results in denitrification as the primary terminal electron-accepting process (36). Because nitrate serves as a more energetically favorable electron acceptor, uranium reduction has been shown to occur only after nitrate has been depleted to low levels (17, 23, 36, 48, 60). Thus, at sites such as the FRC, denitrifying bacteria are likely to play a critical role in uranium bioremediation. A recent phylogenetic survey of sediment from the FRC revealed several potential nitrate-reducing bacteria (2), but it remains unclear what species are involved in nitrate removal upon biostimulation.
The goal of this study was to characterize changes in the in situ microbial community structure of uranium- and nitrate-contaminated subsurface sediments upon stimulation with ethanol and to identify denitrifying bacteria that may be important during the in situ removal of nitrate. While other molecular studies have identified mainly sulfate and metal reducers in uranium-contaminated sediments, it was hypothesized in this study that electron donor addition to high-nitrate subsurface sediments cocontaminated with low levels of uranium would result mainly in the stimulation of denitrifying bacteria. Because denitrification is not a phylogenetically conserved function, numerous methods were used to analyze the microbial community structure of biostimulated and control sediments, including functional gene (nirK and nirS) clone libraries, small subunit (SSU) rRNA gene clone libraries, polar lipid fatty acid (PLFA) analysis, and cultivation of nitrate-reducing bacteria from FRC sediments. Results of this study show that biostimulation of high-nitrate subsurface sediments with ethanol results in a decrease in bacterial diversity and enriches for members of the class Betaproteobacteria, namely, members of the newly described genus Castellaniella (formerly Alcaligenes defragrans), which are capable of nitrate reduction.
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TABLE 1. Summary of initial groundwater chemistry, push-pull test results, and sediment core characteristics
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Enrichment and isolation of denitrifying pure cultures.
Medium for enrichment of dissimilatory nitrate-reducing microorganisms was prepared anaerobically (5) with the following components (per liter): 10 ml vitamin solution (47), 5 ml metals solution (47), 0.1 g NaCl, 0.1 g NH4Cl, 10 mg KCl, 3 mg KH2PO4, 40 mg MgCl2·6H2O, 40 mg CaCl2·2H2O, 11.9 g HEPES, 11.7 g morpholineethanesulfonic acid (MES), and 8.5 g NaNO3. The pH of the medium was adjusted to either 4.5 or 7.5 using HCl or NaOH and dispensed into serum tubes under an N2 headspace. Ethanol was added from a sterile, anoxic stock solution to reach a final concentration of 100 mM.
Anaerobic nitrate-reducing enrichment cultures were set up in an anaerobic glovebag by adding 1 g of homogenized biostimulated sediment from borehole FB064 to 10 ml nitrate-reducing liquid medium at both pH 4.5 and 7.5. Headspace of enrichment cultures was exchanged three times with N2 and incubated in the dark at room temperature. Upon observable growth and removal of nitrate, enrichments were serially diluted and plated onto solid nitrate-reducing media both with and without ethanol at either pH 4.5 or 7.5, depending on the pH of the enrichment culture. Nitrate-reducing solid medium had the same composition as the liquid media except it contained 1.5% agar and 1.7 g/liter NaNO3. After autoclaving, the medium was dispensed into plates and dried overnight. Plates were placed in an anaerobic glovebag (Coy Instruments) overnight. Subsequently, a piece of sterile filter paper was placed in the lid of each petri dish and saturated with 500 µl of a sterile, anoxic 1 M ethanol solution. All plates were incubated at room temperature in an anaerobic glovebag. Colonies from plates containing ethanol that differed in morphology from colonies on ethanol-free plates were further reisolated and transferred to nitrate-reducing liquid medium at pH 4.5 or 7.5. In total, 24 colonies were obtained from pH 7.5 enrichment cultures and 22 from pH 4.5 enrichment cultures.
DNA extraction.
DNA was extracted from frozen soil cores from boreholes FB064, FB067, and FB066 (from depths of 6.4, 4.6, and 3.6 m below the surface, respectively) using the FastDNA SPIN kit for soil (QBiogene, Irvine, CA), which involves a silica and ceramic bead-beating method to achieve cell lysis. Manufacturer's instructions were followed, except nuclease-free water was used as the eluent. In order to increase DNA yield and to account for heterogeneity of the cores, 10 DNA extractions using 0.3 g sediment were done from each core. The 10 DNA samples were then pooled and concentrated by using a Centrivap at 45°C. DNA samples were stored at –20°C.
DNA was extracted from pure cultures by boiling late-log-phase washed cells for 5 minutes; samples were centrifuged to remove cell debris, and supernatants were transferred to clean, sterile 1.5-ml microcentrifuge tubes and stored at –20°C for use as DNA template for PCRs.
PCR, cloning, and sequencing.
Partial SSU rRNA genes from sediment community DNA and denitrifying isolates were amplified using 2 µl of DNA template in a 50-µl PCR mixture (<100 ng/µl, final concentration) containing the following components: 1x PCR buffer (Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA), 2.5 mM MgCl2, 100 µM each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 10 pmol/ml each primer (uni8f and eubac805r) (19), and 1.5 U of Platinum Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen). Amplification of partial SSU rRNA genes was carried out in a GeneAmp PCR system 9700 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) using the following parameters: initial denaturation at 94°C for 5 min; 35 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 50°C for 60 s, and 72°C for 90 s; and a final extension step at 72°C for 20 min. Near-complete SSU rRNA genes of two denitrifying isolates (4.5A2 and 7.5A2) were amplified in the same manner, only using universal primers 27F and 1492R and an annealing temperature of 45°C.
Amplification of nirK and nirS genes from sediment community DNA and denitrifying isolates used the same PCR mixture as described above, except that primer concentrations were 12.5 pmol/ml, nirK primers were nirK1F and nirK5R, and nirS primers were nirS1F and nirS6R (9). PCR parameters were as follows: 94°C for 5 min; 35 cycles of 94°C for 30 s, 54°C for 45 s, and 72°C for 45 s; and a final extension at 72°C for 20 min.
PCR products were cloned using the TOPO TA cloning kit (Invitrogen Corp., Carlsbad, CA) either directly from the PCR product or after a gel purification step using a commercially available kit (QBioGene). Sequencing of inserts was performed by the Advanced Center for Genome Technology at the University of Oklahoma (Norman) or the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation (Oklahoma City, OK).
Phylogenetic analysis.
SSU rRNA gene sequences were aligned using ClustalX (62). Sequences with similarities of
97% were placed into the same operational taxonomic unit (OTU); also, sequences with
93% similarity were placed into the same genus-level taxonomic group (GLTG). Possible chimera within our libraries were identified using Bellerophon (34) and by manual inspection. Chimeric sequences made up approximately 10% of total sequences and were removed from further phylogenetic analyses. Initial phylogenetic placement of each SSU rRNA gene OTU was determined using the Ribosomal Database Project's Classifier program (14). Closely related sequences and sequences identified from this site in previous studies were downloaded from GenBank and aligned with our sequences using ClustalX; the multiple alignment was imported into PAUP 4.01b10 for final phylogenetic analysis. Evolutionary distance-based trees were generated using the neighbor-joining algorithm and Jukes-Cantor corrections. Bootstrap values were determined using 1,000 replicates.
The Shannon-Weiner diversity index, Simpson's dominance index, and species evenness were calculated as previously described (57). A limitation of these indices is that each OTU is considered equivalent, regardless of the degree of sequence divergence (46). To ameliorate this bias, diversity indices were calculated at both the OTU level as well as the GLTG level; also, average nucleotide divergence was calculated for each clone library (46). Calculations of percent coverage were done as described elsewhere (58) at both the OTU and GLTG levels.
A chi-square test for an r x k contingency table was done to determine whether the population distribution in biostimulated samples differed from the unstimulated sample. Rows (r) were phylum affiliation, and columns (k) were different samples (biostimulated and unstimulated). Expected frequencies for each phylum in each sample (E) were calculated by the equation E = (row total) x [(column total)/(grand total)]. A chi-squared value was determined by the equation
2 =
(O – E)2/E (O = observed frequency). The critical
2 value was chosen with nine degrees of freedom and with a P value of 0.05.
Phylogenetic analysis of nirK and nirS genes was done similarly to that of the SSU rRNA genes described above. Sequences were grouped into OTUs based on
98% nucleotide sequence similarity, and the closest relatives were identified and downloaded using BLAST. Other reference nirK and nirS sequences were downloaded from the Functional Gene Pipeline/Repository (http://flyingcloud.cme.msu.edu/fungene/). Neighbor-joining trees were constructed from translated amino acid sequences. Similarity values reported in the results are based on amino acid similarity.
PLFA extraction and analysis.
Lyophilized sediment from each core was extracted with the single-phase chloroform-methanol-buffer system (8), as later modified (67). The total lipid extract was fractionated into neutral lipids, glycolipids, and polar lipids by silicic acid column chromatography (29). PLFA analysis was conducted as previously described (56). Biomass (cells/g of sediment) was calculated from total PLFA/g of sediment using the conversion 2.5 x 104 cells per pmol PLFA (6). Shannon-Weiner diversity indices for sediment samples were also calculated based on PLFA (31).
Analytical methods.
Uranium speciation from sediment cores FB064, FB067, and FB066 was determined by sequential extractions of total U(VI) (soluble and solids associated) and U(IV) from triplicate 0.5-g sediment subsamples using sodium bicarbonate and nitric acid, respectively (18). Uranium from each extraction was measured by kinetic phosphorescence analysis (KPA-11; Chemcheck Instruments, Richland, WA). Nitrate and nitrite from nitrate-reducing enrichments and sediment-associated pore water were measured by ion chromatography (model DX500 fitted with an AS-4A column; Dionex Corp., Sunnyvale, CA). Push-pull groundwater analysis was done at Oregon State University as previously described (36).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
SSU rRNA, nirK, and nirS sequences from this study were deposited with GenBank and can be retrieved with accession numbers EF175318 to EF175380 and EF177768 to EF177803.
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Two strains, 4.5A2 and 7.5A2 (isolated at pH 4.5 and 7.5, respectively), which had 99.9% SSU rRNA gene sequence similarity, were chosen for further phylogenetic analysis. Isolates 4.5A2 and 7.5A2 were 99.4 and 99.7% similar to clone FB46-16, which was identified from biostimulated FRC sediments in a previous study (51). The closest cultured relative was Alcaligenes sp. strain AMS10, which was isolated from a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-degrading consortium (GenBank accession no. AY635901). The closest validly described relatives belong to the genus Castellaniella, which consists of two described species, C. defragrans and C. denitrificans, both of which were previously identified as Alcaligenes defragrans (40). Isolates 4.5A2 and 7.5A2 were 98.3 and 98.5% similar to C. defragrans 54Pin, which was isolated from activated sludge on nitrate and
-pinene (25), and 98.4% similar to C. denitrificans TJ4, a phenol-degrading, denitrifying bacterium (4). Neighbor-joining analysis and bootstrap values supported that FRC isolates 4.5A2 and 7.5A2 may not belong to either of the previously described species of Castellaniella and could represent a novel species within the genus Castellaniella (Fig. 1). However, further physiological tests are needed to prove this.
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FIG. 1. Distance phylogram based on near-full-length SSU rRNA gene sequences (approximately 1,490 bp) from FRC isolates (in bold), FRC sediment clone sequences (clone C FB064 I OTU34 was identified from the FRC biostimulated sediment in this study), and other members of Castellaniella as well as related organisms in the order Burkholderiales (accession numbers are shown in parentheses). Bootstrap values are based on 1,000 replicates and are shown for branches with bootstrap support of >50%.
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In situ biostimulation of contaminated subsurface sediments and reduction of U(VI).
Push-pull tests were done with ethanol-amended, high-nitrate (142.3 mM) FW021 groundwater (neutralized with bicarbonate) in two wells, FW028 and FW034. Prior to biostimulation, the groundwater from FW028 contained high levels of nitrate (167.2 mM) and uranium (2.2 µM) and was more acidic than FW034, which contained <1 mM nitrate and 0.475 µM uranium (Table 1). The control well, FW016, was also acidic but contained 11.4 mM nitrate (Table 1). Following injection of ethanol-amended FW021 groundwater into FW028 and FW034, push-pull data showed nitrate and ethanol loss in both test wells by the time of sediment sampling and U(VI) accumulation in FW028, suggesting U(IV) oxidation may have occurred in this well (Table 1). However, analysis of uranium from bicarbonate- and nitric acid-extractable fractions from sediment cores showed that the majority of the uranium in both cores adjacent to ethanol-stimulated wells (FB064 and FB067, corresponding to wells FW028 and FW034, respectively) was reduced, whereas only 4.6% of the total uranium from the control core FB066 (adjacent to FW016) was reduced (Table 1), suggesting that the U in stimulated cores remained fairly reduced, compared to the control, which has never been biostimulated. Some of the U(IV) in biostimulated cores may have been due to previous push-pull tests performed in adjacent wells (36). Biomass estimates based on total PLFA from sediment cores following in situ biostimulation showed that FB064 and FB067 had approximately 37- and 3-fold higher biomass than the control core, FB066 (Table 1). Pore water nitrate concentrations from the three cores varied, which can be explained by the differences in initial nitrate concentrations of the three sites. Nitrite was present at high concentrations (
10 mM) in all three (Table 1), indicating that nitrate reduction was not complete in these sediment cores.
Differences in bacterial community structure between ethanol-stimulated and unstimulated sediment samples. (i) Diversity statistics.
According to all diversity indices calculated from SSU rRNA gene clone library data (at both the OTU and GLTG levels), both biostimulated sediments, FB064 and FB067, were less diverse than the control sediment, FB066 (Table 2). The percent coverage was 64, 78, and 71% (at the OTU level) and 83, 83, and 80% (at the GLTG level) for sediment samples FB064, FB067, and FB066, respectively. There was a significant negative linear correlation between log biomass of the sediments and average nucleotide divergence (r = –0.999, P = 0.01), indicating that genetic diversity decreased with increasing biomass. Similarly, when diversity indices were calculated based on GLTGs, there were negative correlations between log biomass versus Shannon-Weiner diversity index (r = –0.992, P < 0.05) and log biomass versus evenness (r = –0.999, P = 0.01). In addition, there was a positive correlation between log biomass and Simpson's dominance index at both the OTU level (r = 0.977, P < 0.1) and the GLTG level (r = 0.993, P < 0.04), indicating that increasing biomass resulted in the selection of one dominant species or genus. Correlations between log biomass and diversity indices were more significant when using GLTGs rather than OTUs; this was due to the high number of OTUs in sample FB064 that belonged to the same GLTG. Taking all diversity indices into account, biostimulation may have led to an overall decrease in bacterial diversity and an increase in dominance of one species or genus. Past push-pull biostimulation experiments performed in injection wells FW028 and FW034 (36) may have also contributed to this effect.
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TABLE 2. Descriptive diversity statistics based on SSU rRNA gene clone library data from two ethanol-stimulated sediments and one control sediment
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TABLE 3. Summary of phylogenetic distributions of SSU rRNA clones from samples FB064, FB067, and FB066
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FIG. 2. Distance phylogram of Proteobacteria partial SSU rRNA gene sequences (approximately 800 bp). Bootstrap values are based on 1,000 replicates and are shown for branches with bootstrap support of >50%. Selected OTUs from this study as well as FRC isolate sequences are in bold, and numbers in parentheses indicate the number of clones belonging to that OTU from sediments FB064, FB067, and FB066, respectively. Accession numbers of sequences from GenBank are in parentheses.
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FIG. 3. Distance phylogram of non-Proteobacteria partial SSU rRNA gene sequences (approximately 800 bp). Bootstrap values are based on 1,000 replicates and are shown for branches with bootstrap support of >50%. Selected OTUs from this study are in bold, and numbers in parentheses indicate the number of clones belonging to that OTU from sediments FB064, FB067, and FB066, respectively. Accession numbers of sequences from GenBank are in parentheses.
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Unlike the effect observed on the class Betaproteobacteria, biostimulation resulted in a decrease in the proportion of Gammaproteobacteria sequences in the SSU rRNA gene clone libraries (Table 3). In the control clone library (FB066), 47.1% of total clones were affiliated with Gammaproteobacteria, and of these, the majority (70.8%) belonged to the family Xanthomonadaceae, while others were affiliated with Pseudomonadaceae. The dominant Gammaproteobacteria OTU from the control FB066 (OTU 100) belonged to the genus Rhodanobacter and was closely related to other sequences identified from unstimulated contaminated sites, including groundwater from the FRC (Fig. 2).
Similarly, biostimulated sediments contained a decreased proportion of Acidobacteria clones compared to the control sediment (Table 3). The dominant OTU from the control sediment sample FB066 (OTU 128) belonged to Acidobacteria and clustered with other environmental Acidobacteria clones (Fig. 3); however, only one Acidobacteria-affiliated sequence was detected in the biostimulated libraries (Table 3).
(iii) Novel bacterial diversity identified in SSU rRNA gene clone libraries.
From the three SSU rRNA gene clone libraries generated in this study, 7.5% of all clones belonged to divisions with no cultivated representatives. Three clones belonged to candidate divisions TM7, termite group I, and ZB1 (Table 3; Fig. 3). Nine clones from FB066 and FB067 (belonging to five OTUs) clustered with each other and with other clones, belonging to the candidate division WD272_C2, from the FRC (Fig. 3). The closest non-FRC relatives of these clones came from volcanic ash and polychlorinated biphenyl-polluted soil; bootstrap values from Fig. 3 support that these clones likely belong to the same division as these novel FRC sequences. This candidate division, based on Hugenholtz taxonomy (16), may represent either a novel division or a novel lineage within the Firmicutes (Fig. 3).
(iv) PLFA analysis of sediment samples.
In accordance with clone library data, PLFA data (Table 4) showed that community structure was more diverse and evenly distributed in the unstimulated sample (FB066) compared to the two biostimulated sediment samples (FB064 and FB067). Shannon-Weiner (H) indices calculated from PLFA data further confirm that the unstimulated sediment was less diverse (H = 2.774) than the stimulated sediments, FB064 (H = 1.908) and FB067 (H = 2.461). As with clone library data, there was a significant negative linear correlation between log biomass and Shannon-Weiner diversity index based on PLFA data (r = –0.992, P < 0.05).
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TABLE 4. PLFA analysis of samples FB064, FB067, and FB066a
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Table 4 shows that the dominant PLFAs from the genus Castellaniella (C16:0, C16:1
7c, C17:0 cyclo, and C18:1
7c) (40) were higher in the biostimulated samples than in the control. Although other microorganisms can contain these particular PLFAs, it is likely that some or most of these fatty acids that increased with biomass were derived from Castellaniella species, given that species of this genus were dominant in biostimulated clone libraries.
Denitrifying community composition based on nirK and nirS clone libraries.
From the three nirK clone libraries, 67 clones were sequenced and 10 OTUs were identified. From all three nirK libraries, 98.5% of clones had closest cultured relatives that are Betaproteobacteria (Table 5). Ethanol stimulation resulted in an increase in proportion of total sequences within nirK clone libraries that belong to OTU1K (Table 5; Fig. 4). Clones belonging to OTU1K made up 76 and 59.4% of total clones from libraries derived from biostimulated cores FB064 and FB067, respectively, but only 20% of the total clones from the control clone library from FB066. Also, OTU1K was 100% similar to the nirK sequences from isolate 4.5A2 and 7.5A2, indicating that these genes may belong to the same Castellaniella species dominant in nitrate-reducing enrichments and in SSU rRNA gene clone libraries from biostimulated sediment (Fig. 4), although it is possible some of these genes belong to other species, as horizontal transfer of nirK genes within a site has previously been implicated (32). Seventy percent of clones from the control nirK clone library from FB066 belonged to OTU7K, whose closest relative was the nirK gene product from Alcaligenes sp. strain DSM30128 (81.7% similarity). Amino acid sequences derived from OTU1K and OTU7K, however, were only 77.8% similar to each other.
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TABLE 5. Summary of distributions of nirK OTUs from samples FB064, FB067, and FB066 and nirS OTUs from samples FB064 and FB067
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FIG. 4. Distance phylogram of partial nirK gene product sequences. Bootstrap values are based on 1,000 replicates and are shown for branches with bootstrap support of >50%. Selected OTUs from this study are in bold, and numbers in parentheses indicate the number of clones belonging to that OTU from sediments FB064, FB067, and FB066, respectively. Accession numbers of sequences downloaded from GenBank are in parentheses.
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FIG. 5. Distance phylogram of partial nirS gene product sequences. Bootstrap values are based on 1,000 replicates and are shown for branches with bootstrap support of >50%. Selected OTUs from this study are in bold, and numbers in parentheses indicate the number of clones belonging to that OTU from sediments FB064 and FB067, respectively. Accession numbers of sequences downloaded from GenBank are in parentheses.
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Several studies have documented impacts of radionuclide, heavy metal, and hydrocarbon contamination on microbial community structure, and the general consensus is that pollution decreases microbial diversity (22, 28, 39, 43, 45, 57). Two previous studies done on microbial community structures of pristine versus contaminated areas of the aquifer at the FRC have found that contamination resulted in a decrease in microbial diversity and selected for Betaproteobacteria species related to or belonging to Azoarcus (22) and Alcaligenaceae (57). Furthermore, Betaproteobacteria were found to be abundant in other contaminated environments, including polychlorinated biphenyl-contaminated soil (50), a waste gas biofilter (26, 27), metal- and petroleum-contaminated soil (39), heavy metal-amended soil microcosms (45), and metallurgic wastewater (70). Similarly, our results show that Betaproteobacteria SSU rRNA clones, primarily those affiliated with Alcaligenaceae and Burkholderiaceae, are present in contaminated sediment samples from the FRC (Fig. 2). Also, the majority of nirK and nirS clones in this study shared similarity to nirK and nirS gene products from cultured Betaproteobacteria belonging to the families Alcaligenaceae and Burkholderiaceae as well as Rhodocyclaceae (Table 5; Fig. 4 and 5), suggesting that several of the Betaproteobacteria genera detected in SSU clone libraries may also be capable of denitrification at this site. In a recent phylogenetic survey of bacterial populations from FRC sediment, SSU rRNA clones belonging to Alcaligenaceae and Burkholderiaceae were found to be dominant as well as metabolically active (2). These results, along with the results of this study, suggest that the enrichment of Betaproteobacteria in sediments observed in this study could be due to growth of Betaproteobacteria already widespread and/or active in the aquifer prior to biostimulation that have adapted to the groundwater contaminants at the FRC, which include nitrate, heavy metals, radionuclides, and hydrocarbons.
While our SSU rRNA gene clone libraries showed an abundance of Betaproteobacteria clones in biostimulated sediments, multiple lines of evidence suggest the dominance of a Castellaniella species in biostimulated sediments and its role in nitrate removal in situ. While several studies have proven successful in using molecular approaches to identify bacteria important in bioremediation (12, 33, 61), very few studies have both identified and isolated microorganisms responsible for in situ bioremediation. In one study, organisms were cultivated that had been identified by DGGE from 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-degrading enrichments; these isolates were capable of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid degradation, suggesting their importance in bioremediation in contaminated environments (42). Another study used stable isotope probing of RNA to show that Azoarcus was involved in benzene degradation in groundwater incubations under denitrifying conditions and further isolated organisms belonging to the same phylotype, showing that they could oxidize benzene to CO2 (41). These two studies, however, do not prove the importance of the isolated organisms for in situ bioremediation. In a different study, however, stable isotope probing was used to identify in situ naphthalene degraders; one dominant clone was identified, and an isolate matching this clone (belonging to the genus Polaromonas) was cultivated and shown to also contain a naphthalene dioxygenase gene also detected in the site sediment (38). Similarly, in this study, isolates belonging to the genus Castellaniella were cultivated that matched dominant clones from both SSU rRNA gene and nirK clone libraries generated from biostimulated sediment where nitrate reduction was occurring. Furthermore, PLFA analysis from sediment samples showed an increase in fatty acids common to the genus Castellaniella were associated with biomass increase. Both Castellaniella sp. strains 4.5A2 and 7.5A2 contained nirK and were capable of growth on nitrate as the sole electron acceptor and producing gaseous end product, indicating these organisms are capable of denitrification; if the Castellaniella organisms identified in situ through SSU rRNA and nirK clone libraries shared similar physiology to these isolates, then Castellaniella might play an active role in denitrification at this site upon biostimulation with ethanol. Along with the Polaromonas study (38), this paper shows a relationship between microbial community structure and function through the isolation of a microorganism dominant in clone libraries while also using functional gene sequences to suggest that the microorganism is involved in the process of interest in situ.
The Castellaniella species identified in this study may represent a novel species (Fig. 1). Other Castellaniella organisms have been isolated from activated sludge and are capable of denitrification coupled to the oxidation of monoterpenes (25), taurine (15), and phenol (4). Furthermore, other Alcaligenaceae isolates have been implicated in the degradation of xenobiotic compounds (10) as well as in nitrate removal systems (53). FRC Castellaniella isolates 4.5A2 and 7.5A2 are pH tolerant and were isolated at both low and neutral pHs; thus, they may have been able to out-compete other denitrifiers for nitrate in the acidic groundwater found in Area 1.
A similar molecular ecology study at the FRC found that electron donor addition resulted in an increase in Gammaproteobacteria, such as Geobacter and Anaeromyxobacter, in contaminated FRC Area 1 sediments (51). However, push-pull tests in those experiments were done with low-nitrate groundwater from well GW835 (36), and samples were taken at the end of the extraction phase. Those experiments point to an important role for Fe(III)-reducing bacteria during biostimulation. In this study, groundwater wells were injected with high-nitrate (>130 mM) groundwater from FW021, and sediment samples were taken 1 week after injection of ethanol-amended groundwater (at the beginning of the extraction phase), at which point denitrification was likely occurring (Table 1). The differences in nitrate concentrations of the injection solutions as well as the time at which sediment samples were taken could reflect the differences in community compositions based on SSU rRNA gene clone libraries. Since several terminal electron-accepting processes sequentially occur during biostimulation (36), it is likely that the results from our study provide a snapshot of the microbial community structure during the denitrification phase, while the previous study (51) provides a snapshot of the microbial community structure when geochemical conditions were more reduced. This would reflect observations of other studies that shifts in microbial community structure occur during different stages of bioremediation processes (35, 37, 73).
In this study descriptive diversity statistics are provided to describe the effect of biostimulation on in situ diversity of microbial populations. A recent study has shown that bioremediation in a fluidized bed reactor treating nitrate- and uranium-contaminated groundwater resulted in an initial decrease in bacterial diversity followed by an increase in diversity (35). In accordance with this finding, other molecular studies have also shown that biostimulation of hydrocarbon-contaminated sediments results in an initial decrease in species diversity followed by an increase in diversity (37, 59). Our results also support that biostimulation resulted in a decrease in bacterial diversity; however, it is possible that biodiversity could later increase, as observed in the above studies. The effects of fluctuations in species diversity on ecosystem function (in this case, nitrate and uranium removal from groundwater at the FRC) are unclear. While many ecological studies have linked species richness or high species diversity in natural systems or microcosms with an increase in ecosystem function and/or stability (7, 11, 63), few studies have examined the effect of bacterial species diversity on ecosystem function in engineered systems, where often one substrate is available for consumption, as opposed to natural ecosystems, where increased species richness might aid in a more productive consumption of all available resources. For example, in glucose-fed methanogenic bioreactors, it was found that a bioreactor with lower bacterial diversity, or more "flexible" microbial communities, was more functionally stable than a more species-rich bioreactor (21). Similarly, at the FRC, the desired ecosystem function (i.e., nitrate and uranium reduction) may likely be unaffected by lower diversity when a simple substrate such as ethanol is used as an electron donor.
This work was supported by the Office of Biological and Environmental Research of the Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy, Environmental Remediation Sciences Program (FG03-02ER63443, DE-FC02-96ER62278, and FG02-00ER62986).
Published ahead of print on 8 June 2007. ![]()
Present address: Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK. ![]()
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