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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2008, p. 5297-5304, Vol. 74, No. 17
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00387-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Molecular Characterization of the Bacterial Communities in the Different Compartments of a Full-Scale Reverse-Osmosis Water Purification Plant 
L. A. Bereschenko,1,2,3
G. H. J. Heilig,2
M. M. Nederlof,1
M. C. M. van Loosdrecht,3
A. J. M. Stams,2 and
G. J. W. Euverink1*
Wetsus, P.O. Box 1113, 8900 CC Leeuwarden, The Netherlands,1
Laboratory of Microbiology, Wageningen University, Dreijenplein 10, 6703 HB Wageningen, The Netherlands,2
Delft University of Technology, Julianalaan 67, 2628 BC Delft, The Netherlands3
Received 15 February 2008/
Accepted 2 July 2008

ABSTRACT
The origin, structure, and composition of biofilms in various
compartments of an industrial full-scale reverse-osmosis (RO)
membrane water purification plant were analyzed by molecular
biological methods. Samples were taken when the RO installation
suffered from a substantial pressure drop and decreased production.
The bacterial community of the RO membrane biofilm was clearly
different from the bacterial community present at other locations
in the RO plant, indicating the development of a specialized
bacterial community on the RO membranes. The typical freshwater
phylotypes in the RO membrane biofilm (i.e.,
Proteobacteria,
Cytophaga-Flexibacter-Bacteroides group, and
Firmicutes) were
also present in the water sample fed to the plant, suggesting
a feed water origin. However, the relative abundances of the
different species in the mature biofilm were different from
those in the feed water, indicating that the biofilm was actively
formed on the RO membrane sheets and was not the result of a
concentration of bacteria present in the feed water. The majority
of the microorganisms (59% of the total number of clones) in
the biofilm were related to the class
Proteobacteria, with a
dominance of
Sphingomonas spp. (27% of all clones). Members
of the genus
Sphingomonas seem to be responsible for the biofouling
of the membranes in the RO installation.

INTRODUCTION
Membrane biofouling is an important problem for reverse-osmosis
(RO) systems, in particular for RO membranes (
13,
14,
17). The
attachment of bacteria to membrane surfaces and subsequent biofilm
growth in the spiral-wound RO membrane elements strongly influence
RO system performance and RO plant productivity. Problems are
due primarily to an increase in the differential pressures of
the RO modules, the long-term membrane flux reduction of the
RO plant, and the deterioration of product water quality as
a result of high levels of biomass accumulation on RO membrane
surfaces (
37,
43,
45). Once in progress, biofouling regularly
and persistently hampers the RO water treatment process (
13,
15).
Presently, adequate measures to prevent or reduce biofouling are lacking. The microbiological and physical processes associated with biofilm formation and biofouling in these dynamic and high-pressure environments are poorly understood. The conditions change from an oligotrophic environment in the beginning to a heterotrophic environment when the biofilm is mature. The first indications that a variety of different microorganisms participate in biofilm development on RO membranes were obtained by traditional dissections of fouled RO membrane elements (autopsies) and the subsequent analysis of the membrane surface-fouling layers. The conventional plating and colony isolation methods showed the presence of a wide variety of species on the feed and permeative surfaces of biofouled cellulose acetate, polyetherurea thin-film composite, or polyamide thin-film-composite membranes (4, 9, 17, 19, 28, 38, 39). However, by cultivation-dependent methods, information about only 0.01 to 3% of the population in natural environments is obtained (2, 20, 23). In recent years, the microbial-community structure in RO membrane samples obtained from full-scale membrane-based water purification processes was examined using 16S rRNA gene clone libraries and fluorescence in situ hybridization methods (7) and using PCR-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and sequence analysis of constructed clone libraries containing larger PCR fragments of the 16S rRNA gene (6). Pang and Liu (33) investigated the microbial-community composition of a biofilm retrieved from a lab-scale RO membrane module by applying a 16S rRNA gene-based clone library and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. Nevertheless, a complete picture of the bacterial population responsible for the biofouling of RO systems is still lacking. A molecular study of microbial populations in all compartments of a full-scale RO water purification plant had not yet been performed.
This study aims to gain insight into the origins and compositions of the biofilms in full-scale RO systems by investigating the bacterial communities in terms of species composition and species diversity, as part of the free-living communities in the feed and product water, and as part of the film-forming communities attached to surfaces. The bacterial-community structure in various compartments of a full-scale RO water purification plant, including the RO feed water (F) (fresh surface water), the wall of the ultrafiltration storage tank (UF), a cartridge filter (CF), a biofouled RO membrane (M), and RO product water (P) (process water) was determined by molecular techniques. A PCR-DGGE approach (31) combined with the analysis of constructed clone libraries containing larger PCR fragments of the 16S rRNA gene (44) and DGGE screening of the isolated clones were used to reveal the differences between the bacterial community of the RO membrane biofilm and the other different locations of an RO plant.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Sampling locations and procedures.
Samples were collected in May 2006 from a full-scale RO water
purification plant located in Veendam, The Netherlands. The
plant used energy-saving polyamide (ESPA) RO membrane elements
(ESPA 2; Hydranautics, CA) to produce process water. The F fed
to the RO system of the plant was extensively treated by the
sequential application of coagulation, flocculation, sand filtration,
ultrafiltration, and cartridge filtration processes. An additional
chemical treatment of the RO membrane elements with an acid-alkaline
solution was applied to this system once a week to maintain
a reasonable flux. The samples were taken from the F, UF, CF,
M, and P when the RO installation suffered from a substantial
pressure drop and decreased production. The F, P, and UF samples
were obtained prior to plant shutdown and RO membrane element
removal. The UF sample was scraped from the walls of the ultrafiltration
storage tank. For the collection of the RO membrane samples,
the first membrane element from the first stage of the investigated
RO system was selected. The element, used for about 1 year in
the water purification process, was retrieved from the RO unit
after plant shutdown, wrapped in plastic sheeting, and transferred
to the laboratory for an autopsy on the same day. The samples
were taken directly after physical dissection and during the
autopsy of the RO membrane by excising small sections from different
locations in the membranes (the tightly associated membrane
samples) or by scraping material from a known area on the surfaces
of the membranes (the loose biofilm samples). All samples were
collected in sterile tubes and kept on ice until further processing
within 1 day.
Total DNA extraction.
The microbial biomass from the water samples (10 ml) was collected by centrifugation at 10,000 x g for 10 min and suspended in 0.5 ml of phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.0). Approximately 0.5 mg material was transferred from the biofilm samples to a clean tube, mixed with 0.5 ml of phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.0), and homogenized using a vortex. All samples were subjected to 20 min of sonication, and the total community DNA was extracted from 0.5 ml of homogenate using a minibead beater with the Fast DNA spin kit for soil (MP Biomedicals) in accordance with the manufacturer's instructions. The quality of the DNA was checked by agarose gel electrophoresis. Aliquots of each DNA extract were further purified and concentrated with a DNA Clean & Concentrator-5 kit (Zymo Research) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
PCR amplification and DGGE analysis of amplified 16S rRNA genes.
PCR amplification of bacterial 16S rRNA genes from total genomic DNA was performed using Go Taq DNA polymerase (Promega) with primers 954-f and 1369-r (MWG-Biotech AG), targeting the hypervariable V6-V8 region, as previously described by Zhongtang and Morrison (46). A 40-base GC clamp (5'-CGCCGGGGGCGCGCCCCGGGCGGGGCGGGGGCACGGG-GGG-3') was attached to the forward primer at the 5' end. A typical PCR mixture (50 µl) contained 10 ng template DNA, each deoxynucleoside triphosphate at a concentration of 200 µM (Invitrogen), each primer at 0.5 µM, 1.25 U of Go Taq DNA polymerase, and 1x PCR buffer containing 3 mM MgCl2 (Promega). The reactions were performed in an iCycler (Bio-Rad) with predenaturation at 94°C for 2 min, followed by 35 cycles consisting of 30 s at 94°C, 30 s at 56°C, and 60 s at 72°C. The cycles were completed with a final extension step of 7 min at 72°C. DGGE analysis of the generated amplicons was performed using a DCode System (Bio-Rad) as previously described by Heilig et al. (18). A mixture of the DGGE-PCR products from nine bacterial species was applied as a marker. The number of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in each sample was defined as the number of DGGE bands with distinct electrophoretic mobilities.
Cloning of PCR-amplified products and sequence analyses.
Amplification of the almost-full-length bacterial 16S rRNA gene fragments with the 7-f and 1510-r universal bacterial primers (27) was performed with the iCycler as described previously (6). Amplified fragments were purified with the DNA Clean & Concentrator-5 kit, ligated into the pGEM-T easy vector (Promega kit), and cloned into Escherichia coli XL1-Blue according to the manufacturer's instructions. Vector-harboring clones were transferred with a sterile toothpick into 50 µl of Tris-EDTA buffer and were incubated at 95°C for 15 min to lyse the cells. The PCR amplification of cell lysates with T7 and Sp6 pGEM-T-specific primers and the selection of clones containing insertions of the appropriate sizes by the RFLP analysis were performed as described previously (6). Individual clones with a unique RFLP pattern were selected and screened by DGGE analysis with the V6-V8 primers (GC-954-f and 1369-r). Their DGGE bands were detected in the original DGGE fingerprint profile of the biofilm community by using BioNumerics software (BioSystematica). Unique inserts were bidirectionally sequenced with T7 and Sp6 primers (BaseClear, Leiden, The Netherlands). Checks for chimeric sequences were conducted by using the Chimera Check program at http://www.cme.msu. edu/RDP/html/index.html (29), and sequence similarity was analyzed by using the NCBI BLAST search tool at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST (1) and the GenBank database.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide sequence data reported in this study were deposited in GenBank under accession numbers EU428849 to EU428950.

RESULTS
Observations during autopsy.
At the laboratory, the removed RO membrane element was unpacked
and cut open, and the membrane packs were unfolded and visually
examined. The visual inspection of the element showed the presence
of a slimy, opaque, light-brown deposit on the surfaces of all
membrane sheets and feed spacers (Fig.
1), indicating that the
fouling layers were not eliminated by the routine (once-a-week)
cleaning procedures of the RO units in this system. After 1
year of operation, the fouling layer was spread over the complete
membrane and the feed spacer surfaces in the module. This fouling
layer was quite loosely attached to the RO membrane and could
be relatively easily scraped from the surface (Fig.
1C). It
was also noted that the membrane surfaces were more intensely
fouled than the feed spacer surfaces, and no visible fouling
was observed on the surfaces of the product spacers.
Clone library construction and analysis.
In total, five 16S rRNA gene clone libraries, containing a total
of 635 clones, were constructed with the
Bacteria primer set
(7-f and 1510-r) by using total genomic DNA isolated from the
F, UF, CF, M, and P. All the clones in the libraries were subjected
to RFLP analysis, and clones with identical RFLP patterns were
grouped together into clone families. One representative clone
from each clone family was partially sequenced. Subsequently,
the full sequence of the 16S rRNA gene was determined from those
clones that contained a unique sequence and that corresponded
with a dominant band in the DGGE community fingerprints.
The nucleotide sequences of a total of 635 clones were determined. A total of 35 clones were detected as possible chimeras and were excluded from further community analysis. The nucleotide sequences of the remaining clones, which included 179, 67, 90, 152, and 112 clones from the F, UF, CF, M, and P libraries, respectively, were further analyzed for their phylogenetic affiliations and closest relatives by searching the GenBank database with the NCBI BLAST search tool. Different sequence types (or OTUs) affiliated with various phylogenetic lineages of the domain Bacteria (with a sequence similarity of >0.90) were obtained from the clone libraries (Table 1). Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the Proteobacteria division dominated all clone libraries in this study, in which the Betaproteobacteria subdivision was the largest bacterial group found in water samples of the F and P (85% and 65% of total clones, respectively), and members of the Alphaproteobacteria subdivision were numerically the most frequently encountered in the biofilms of the samples of the UF, CF, and M (28%, 29%, and 35% of total clones, respectively). Furthermore, members of the Betaproteobacteria subdivision made up the second-largest fraction in the UF, CF, and M (24%, 20%, and 14% of total clones, respectively), whereas members of the Alphaproteobacteria subdivision made up the second-largest fraction in the F and P (8 and 9% of total clones).
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TABLE 1. Phylogenetic affiliations and frequencies of cloned bacterial 16S rRNA gene ampliconsa retrieved from RO samples from the full-scale RO water treatment plant
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The majority of the
Alphaproteobacteria found in all samples
were primarily affiliated with the genus
Sphingomonas; 2 to
7% of the total number of clones in these libraries were related
to known
Sphingomonas species (>97% similarity) (Table
1).
The remaining clones in this group were closely related to other
known
Alphaproteobacteria, like
Afipia massiliensis and
Hyphomicrobium sp. (present in three of the five samples), "
Caulobacter ginsengisoli,"
Mesorhizobium sp., uncultured "
Nordella" sp.,
Pedomicrobium manganicum, and
Sphingopyxis sp. Two OTUs (3% of the total number
of clones) from the M sample were related to two uncultured
species of
Alphaproteobacteria.
Within the Betaproteobacteria lineage, Acidovorax, Burkholderia, and Janthinobacterium were the common bacterial genera in all samples. In this study, the genus Burkholderia represented the largest fraction in the Betaproteobacteria subgroup (Fig. 2) of the F and P libraries (78% and 41% of total clones, respectively). Janthinobacterium spp. were found mainly in the UF and CF samples (15% and 14% of total clones, respectively). The most dominant betaproteobacterium in the M sample was related to Nitrosomonas sp. strain Nm59 (4%). The remaining sequences identified as Betaproteobacteria were closely related to known species, such as "Aquamonas fontana," the aquatic bacterium R1-B18, the betaproteobacterium A0637, Comamonadaceae, Hydrogenophaga spp., and Simplicispira spp. However, in P samples, 11% of the total clones were related to uncultured betaproteobacterium species.
All biofilm samples (UF, CF, and M) further comprised OTUs from
the
Gammaproteobacteria division (22%, 19%, and 9% of the total
clones, respectively). Members of the phylum
Firmicutes were
found mostly in UF and CF biofilms (12% and 17% of the total
clones, respectively) and consisted mainly of
Clostridium species
(UF, 11% of the total clones; CF, 13%). From the
Gammaproteobacteria division, the most frequently encountered OTUs from the biofilm
samples were closely related to
Pseudomonas spp. (UF, 21% of
the total clones; CF, 16%) or showed 95 to 96% similarity with
Lysobacter spp. (M, 6% of the total clones). Bacteria related
to members of the
Cytophaga,
Flexibacter, and
Bacteroides groups
were found in all samples in similar percentages. Furthermore,
in biofilms of the UF, CF, and M, bacteria related to uncultured
environmental clones from the
Acidobacteria (6%, 8%, and 3%
of total clones, respectively) and
Verrucomicrobiae groups (3%,
4%, and 2% of total clones, respectively) were found. Species
related to uncultured environmental clones from the
Planctomycetacea group were found in the M and P samples only (15% and 5% of
all clones, respectively). Differing from the rest of the biofilm
samples, the M sample further comprised clones related to
Actinobacteria (4% of the total clones). Nine other OTUs from M samples (11%
of the total clones) were related to unknown uncultured bacteria,
some with a homology of less than 95%, or showed no exact match
(<90% similarity) with any of the known bacterial sequences
found in the databases. Similarly, no exact match was found
for 3% of the total clones in the P sample.
Fingerprinting of RO biofilm communities by DGGE.
DGGE analysis of PCR-amplified fragments of the hypervariable V6-V8 region of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene (approximately 415 bp) obtained from the F, UF, CF, M, and P samples revealed clearly discriminative "fingerprints" of bacterial communities from various compartments of the investigated RO plant (Fig. 3). The gel image shows distinct bands (or OTUs), indicating the presence of multiple species in all of the samples tested. At least two DGGE bands could clearly be discriminated as dominant (intense bands) within each single biofilm sample. The highest number of dominant bands was present in the M sample (seven bands) and the lowest in the F sample (two bands). The remainder of the samples each contained four dominant bands.
The complexity of the DGGE profiles (Fig.
3) of the microbial
community in the F sample (lane F) is less than that of the
free-living community in the P sample (lane P) and that of the
biofilm-forming communities attached to the surfaces of the
UF (lane UF), CF (lane CF), and M (lane M). In general, the
bacterial communities from the F and P samples had similar community
fingerprints (71% similarity) but were markedly different from
those of the other three samples. The DGGE profiles obtained
from the samples from the CF and UF showed similar community
fingerprints (96% similarity), but these were also different
from the fingerprints from the other three samples. The M sample
had a unique fingerprint compared to those of the other samples.
The feed spacer sample of the investigated RO membrane module
had a very similar DGGE pattern (data not shown). Moreover,
the samples of the tested product spacer showed the presence
of bacteria that were also found in the RO membrane sample but
in relatively low numbers according to their band intensities
in the gel (vaguely visible bands [data not shown]). The bacterial
species representing the visible bands of the DGGE profiles
of the F, UF, CF, M, and P samples were identified by comparing
the migration profiles of the PCR amplicons in the original
biofilm community fingerprints with the migration profiles of
the DGGE-PCR products from the individual clones. Except for
the minor constituents, most members of biofilm communities
detected by the cloning library approach could be associated
with one of the visible bands in the DGGE profiles. In total,
35 distinct DGGE bands could be associated with at least one
of the identified clones in the constructed libraries.

DISCUSSION
In this study, we describe the complex and diverse bacterial
communities in various compartments of a full-scale RO water
purification plant by using two culture-independent methods.
The bacterial communities were investigated in terms of their
species diversity and the relative abundances of the free-living
communities in the F and P samples and of the film-forming communities
attached to the UF, CF, and M. The biodiversity of these communities,
as revealed by analysis of 16S rRNA genes from the total biofilm
community, was larger than that found by the DGGE approach.
The cloning method was more powerful than DGGE in evaluating
the complexity and composition especially of biofilms on M,
because 2.5-fold-more genetically different bacteria were identified
than in the DGGE analysis. The DGGE fingerprints underestimated
the diversity of the communities due to the comigration of several
different 16S rRNA gene fragments observed in experiments where
individual clones from the libraries were subjected to DGGE
profiling. All OTUs from the species that were present in relative
high numbers in the sample communities (Table
1; Fig.
2) were
detected as visible DGGE bands (Fig.
3). Although DGGE analysis
in this study did not visualize all the members of a complex
microbial community as separate bands, both methods could detect
the same dominant species in the communities. The inability
to detect populations of low abundance and overlapping DGGE
bands was also shown by Muyzer et al. (
31) and Murray et al.
(
30).
A large difference exists between the bacterial-community composition of the M biofilm and the bacterial-community compositions at other locations in the RO plant. The M biofilm community was more complex than the bacterial populations in the other compartments of the RO plant (Table 1; Fig. 2 and 3), indicating the occurrence of different selection mechanisms at different compartments in the full-scale plant. These differences indicate that the biofilm was actively formed on the M surfaces and was not the result of a simple concentration of bacteria present in the F. Undoubtedly, a bacterial community adapted to this environment was present in the form of a biofilm on the M surface at the moment of sampling, when changes in plant performance were noted (an increased pressure drop over the RO module). This complex community was represented by bacterial species with different physiological traits, most likely selectively promoted under changing physical-chemical and microbiological conditions in the dynamic and high-pressure (12-bar) operating environment of the RO system. Apparently, the predominant bacterial species capable of handling these conditions were related to the genus Sphingomonas (27% of all clones), which is known to thrive in biofilms (7, 21, 24, 25). The Planctomycetacea, the second-largest group associated with the M biofilm (15% of all clones), are free-living aquatic oligotrophs that feed on algae or on their degradation products (16). Some of them contain a large number of open reading frames coding for enzymes necessary for polysaccharide degradation (www.regx.de), which are present in large amounts in biofilms (22, 26). A relatively low abundance of other different species in the M biofilm community found in this study (Table 1) cannot be interpreted as evidence that these minority populations are of little importance to the community as a whole. Even very low levels of bacterial species can maintain community activity (11).
The discovery of the typical freshwater phylotypes (47) in the M biofilm, as well as the detection of most of them (i.e., Proteobacteria, Cytophaga-Flexibacter-Bacteroides, and Firmicutes) in the F sample, suggests a feed water origin rather than a manufacturing contamination in the RO unit. Although a relatively small number of bacterial genera (approximately 12) appears to dominate the F community at the moment of the sampling, all of them, except Dyella, were also found in the film-forming communities on the UF, CF, or M surfaces in addition to the P community (Table 1). The observed dominance of the genus Sphingomonas in the UF, CF, and M samples (Table 1; Fig. 2 and 3) may be explained by the strong association of these organisms with surfaces (34), while the prevalence of the Betaproteobacteria in the water samples (the F and P samples) was consistent with their abundance in the freshwater as plankton (47). On the other hand, the absence of bacteria related to Acidobacteria, Actinobacteria, Deltaproteobacteria, Chlorobium, Planctomycetacea, Verrucomicrobiae, and some other bacterial groups in the F sample and their presence in the other samples suggest that these organisms entered the plant prior to the sampling. The logical explanation of the exclusive presence of some bacterial species at different locations is that the conditions inside the RO plant were optimal.
The detection of different bacterial sequences in the P sample was rather unexpected, since the passage of the bacteria through the RO membrane (8-in. Hydranautics ESPA 2) is theoretically impossible. Also, it is not clear why bacteria such as Aquamonas, Chlorobium, Desulfarculus, Geobacter, and Mesorhizobium were found in the P sample, since they were not detected in the other samples. The reason might be that these organisms are involved in the biofouling of the pipelines connecting the RO system with the permeate storage tank. The presence of Geobacter, an anaerobe involved in the reduction of Fe(III) (8), could indicate the corrosion processes of these pipelines on metallic surfaces. Also, the detection of the green sulfur bacteria from the genus Chlorobium indicates that the environment is anaerobic, because their photosynthesis can occur only in the complete absence of oxygen (32). However, it is not clear how these bacteria can survive and possibly even grow without light.
This is the first molecular study of microbial populations that has been performed on all units of a full-scale RO water purification plant. This approach allowed for the understanding of how bacterial communities are distributed throughout the RO plant and where they originate. The investigations suggest an important role of Sphingomonas in the biological-membrane fouling of spiral-wound membrane elements applied in the RO water purification processes. The members of this genus were the most prevalent organisms in the M biofilms in this study but also in our previously reported investigations, in which bacterial biofilms that developed on RO membranes of
5.5 year-old M elements were investigated (6). As the RO plant location, process configuration, cleaning type and frequency, membrane surface material, feed water, and the sampling time (May) of the M samples were the same as in our earlier study, the presence of Sphingomonas in all membrane biofilm communities confirms that these organisms are positively selected because of their competitive advantages for survival in this environment. As facultative oligotrophs, they are metabolically well adapted to a low-carbon environment (10, 41) and can proliferate under conditions of limited substrates for bacterial growth in the initially clean RO system. Sphingomonas organisms are able to utilize a broad range of naturally occurring organic compounds as well as many types of environmental contaminants (5). Apparently, they are also able to survive at high nutrient concentrations that occur close to the membrane surface in the RO units due to the concentration polarization effect in membrane separation processes and the accumulation of nutrients in the biofilm matrix. Furthermore, Sphingomonas species can change their planktonic state to sessile when the culture conditions, such as the level of aeration, are changed (35). Hence, a low-oxygen concentration, generally typical for the M modules, could stimulate their potential ability to form M biofilms. The transport of Sphingomonas to the membrane surfaces under continuous-flow conditions in spiral-wound M elements could be facilitated by their twitching and swarming motility (34). Their ability to produce different kinds of extracellular polysaccharides (12, 22, 35, 36) can help to initiate biofilm formation and to keep them attached to the membranes (3, 34). Moreover, the slimy extracellular polysaccharide matrix may protect the cells inside a biofilm matrix against the regular chemical cleaning procedures by acting as a chemically reactive barrier that inactivates the cleaning chemicals (40). Pang and coworkers (34) observed that one of the most dominant bacterial isolates previously retrieved by Chen et al. (7) from a biofouled M sample treating potable water, Sphingomonas sp. strain RO2, effectively colonized different RO membranes in continuous-flow cell systems regardless of their surface properties. Hence, Sphingomonas and other biofilm-associated slime producers, like Rhizobiales bacteria (33), are responsible for membrane surface colonization that facilitates the attachment of other bacteria and encourages the maturation of the biofilm. The formation and accumulation of exopolymeric substances, characteristic of growing biofilms (42), substantially decrease the water flux through membranes (21), one of the typical problems associated with biofouling in the actual practice of RO systems. Research is in progress to identify the nature of exopolymers formed by sphingomonas strains isolated from RO membranes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was performed at Waterlaboratorium Noord (Kisuma,
Veendam) and Wetsus, Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Water
Technology. Wetsus is funded by the city of Leeuwarden, the
Province of Fryslân, the European Union's European Regional
Development Fund, the EZ/KOMPAS program of the Samenwerkingsverband
Noord-Nederland, and the Ministry of Economic Affairs. We thank
the participants of the theme "Biofouling" for their interest
and financial contributions.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Wetsus, Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Water Technology, P.O. Box 1113, 8900 CC Leeuwarden, The Netherlands. Phone: 31(0)582846200. Fax: 31(0)582846202. E-mail:
gertjan.euverink{at}wetsus.nl 
Published ahead of print on 11 July 2008. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 2008, p. 5297-5304, Vol. 74, No. 17
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