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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 1999, p. 5009-5016, Vol. 65, No. 11
Department of Chemical Engineering and
Chemical Technology, Imperial College of Science, Technology and
Medicine, London SW7 2BY, United Kingdom
Received 4 May 1999/Accepted 26 August 1999
Although obligate syntrophic reactions cannot proceed without
hydrogenotrophs, it has been unclear from the literature whether potential improvements are achievable with higher concentrations of
hydrogenotrophs. In this study, the relative importance of formate-/H2-utilizing and acetate-utilizing trophic groups
in the anaerobic degradation of butyrate and propionate was assessed by
adding various proportions of these enriched cultures to a mixed
anaerobic seed inoculum. The improvement resulting from the additional
acetate-utilizing cultures was much greater than with
formate/H2 utilizers. Furthermore, formate/H2
utilizers did not improve propionate utilization significantly,
suggesting the importance of optimum utilization of hydrogenotrophic
capacity. During most of the volatile fatty acid (VFA) degradation
period, the system responded with characteristic hydrogen levels to
maintain the Gibbs free energy of oxidation approximately constant for both butyrate (
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Relative Importance of Trophic Group Concentrations
during Anaerobic Degradation of Volatile Fatty Acids
6 kJ) and propionate (
14 kJ). These free-energy values were independent of methanogenic activity, as well as the volume
of the seed inoculum and the VFA concentrations present. By comparing
the experimental results with kinetic and mass transfer models, it was
postulated that the diffusional transfer of reducing equivalents was
the major limiting factor for efficient VFA degradation. Therefore, for
optimum utilization of the hydrogenotrophs, low acetate concentrations
are vital to enable the system to respond with higher
formate/H2 levels, thus leading to improved transfer of
reducing equivalents. Due to the small number of propionate utilizers
(and hence their limited surface area) and low bulk liquid
concentrations, the additional formate/H2 utilizers were of
minimal use for improving the degradation rate further. The butyrate
degradation rates strongly correlated with the cumulative activity of
hydrogenotrophs and acetotrophs over the experimental range studied,
indicating the need to model obligate syntrophic reactions as a
dependent function of methanogenic activity.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Chemical Engineering and Chemical Technology, Imperial College of
Science, Technology and Medicine, London SW7 2B4, United Kingdom.
Phone: 0171-594 5591. Fax: 0171-594 5629. E-mail:
d.stuckey{at}ic.ac.uk.
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