Effect of Co‐Substrates on Aerobic Phenol Degradation by Acclimatized and Non‐acclimatized Enrichment Cultures

M Bajaj, C Gallert, J Winter - Engineering in Life Sciences, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
M Bajaj, C Gallert, J Winter
Engineering in Life Sciences, 2008Wiley Online Library
Aerobic degradation of 7 mmol/L phenol in the presence of alternative carbon sources (7
mmol/L glucose or acetate or 1–2 mmol/L 2‐chlorophenol) was investigated using non‐
acclimatized and acclimatized sewage sludges and enrichment cultures. The substrates
represented an intermediate of phenol degradation (acetate), an independent substrate
(glucose) or a “precursor‐substrate” of phenol degradation (2‐chlorophenol). Bacteria from
sewage sludge, not pre‐adapted to phenol (2 mmol/L), rapidly respired acetate and glucose …
Abstract
Aerobic degradation of 7 mmol/L phenol in the presence of alternative carbon sources (7 mmol/L glucose or acetate or 1–2 mmol/L 2‐chlorophenol) was investigated using non‐acclimatized and acclimatized sewage sludges and enrichment cultures. The substrates represented an intermediate of phenol degradation (acetate), an independent substrate (glucose) or a “precursor‐substrate” of phenol degradation (2‐chlorophenol). Bacteria from sewage sludge, not pre‐adapted to phenol (2 mmol/L), rapidly respired acetate and glucose in the presence of phenol, whereas phenol was only bioconverted to any unknown aromatic metabolite after 24 h. In the presence of phenol and 2‐chlorophenol, no removal of both substances was observed when using the unacclimatized sludge. Sludge that was acclimatized to the degradation of phenol showed an initial preference for easily degradable co‐substrates such as glucose or acetate with only a slow concomitant respiration of phenol. Respiration of phenol increased rapidly after the co‐substrates were depleted. The highest phenol degradation rates were 51.6 mmol/L d, when phenol was the sole carbon substrate. Vice versa, phenol was preferentially respired in the presence of a less easily degradable co‐substrate such as 2‐chlorophenol at a rate of around 7 mmol/L d. Further studies with an enrichment culture that was obtained after 7 successive transfers of phenol‐adapted sludge into mineral medium with phenol as the only carbon source indicated that the acetate and glucose‐degrading capabilities were diminished or almost completely lost. In these enrichment cultures, phenol degradation was not affected by the presence of glucose, but glucose was not degraded. In contrary, the presence of acetate slightly slowed down the phenol degradation rate of the enrichment culture. Growth of the microorganisms apparently occurred at the expense of phenol and acetate respiration. The result of this work may be of practical importance in determining the feeding strategy, which is the key factor for most biological wastewater treatment systems. When acetate was present together with phenol in a wastewater, the phenol degradation rates were influenced by acetate, since acetate was an intermediate of phenol degradation. Glucose as an “independent substrate” was apparently degraded by other bacteria via acetate, and in this way it also influenced the phenol degradation rates. Glucose‐degrading bacteria could be “washed out” from the acclimatized sludge during several transfers into mineral medium with phenol as the sole carbon source. If later on, glucose was added again, it remained undegraded and did not influence phenol degradation. 2‐Chlorophenol degradation also requires other bacteria than phenol degraders.
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