Microorganisms (Feb 2024)

Denitrification Characteristics of the Low-Temperature Tolerant Denitrification Strain <i>Achromobacter spiritinus</i> HS2 and Its Application

  • Ya-Juan Gao,
  • Ting Zhang,
  • Ling-Kang Hu,
  • Shi-Yuan Liu,
  • Chen-Chen Li,
  • Yong-Sheng Jin,
  • Hong-Bin Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12030451
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 451

Abstract

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The low-temperature environment significantly inhibits the growth and metabolism of denitrifying bacteria, leading to an excessive concentration of ammonia nitrogen and total nitrogen in sewage treatment plants during the cold season. In this study, an efficient denitrifying strain of heterotrophic nitrification–aerobic denitrification (HN–AD) bacteria named HS2 was isolated and screened from industrial sewage of a chemical factory in Inner Mongolia at 8 °C. The strain was confirmed to be Achromobacter spiritinus, a colorless rod-shaped bacterium. When cultured with sodium succinate as the carbon source, a carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of 20–30, a shaking rate of 150–180 r/min, and an initial pH of 6–10, the strain HS2 exhibited excellent nitrogen removal at 8 °C. Through the results of whole-genome sequencing, gene amplification, and gas product detection, the strain HS2 was determined to possess key enzyme genes in both nitrification and denitrification pathways, suggesting a HN–AD pathway of NH4+-N → NH2OH → NO2−N → NO → N2O → N2. At 8 °C, the strain HS2 could completely remove ammonia nitrogen from industrial sewage with an initial concentration of 127.23 mg/L. Microbial species diversity analysis of the final sewage confirmed Achromobacter sp. as the dominant genus, which indicated that the low-temperature denitrifying strain HS2 plays an important role in nitrogen removal in actual low-temperature sewage.

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