mSphere (Apr 2020)
Cross-Feeding between Members of <italic toggle="yes">Thauera</italic> spp. and <italic toggle="yes">Rhodococcus</italic> spp. Drives Quinoline-Denitrifying Degradation in a Hypoxic Bioreactor
Abstract
ABSTRACT The complex bacterial community in a quinoline-degrading denitrifying bioreactor is predominated by several taxa, such as Thauera and Rhodococcus. However, it remains unclear how the interactions between the different bacteria mediate quinoline metabolism under denitrifying conditions. In this study, we designed a sequence-specific amplification strategy to isolate the most predominant bacteria and obtained four strains of Thauera aminoaromatica, a representative of a key member in the bioreactor. Tests on these isolates demonstrated that all were unable to degrade quinoline but efficiently degraded 2-hydroxyquinoline, the hypothesized primary intermediate of quinoline catabolism, under nitrate-reducing conditions. However, another isolate, Rhodococcus sp. YF3, corresponding to the second most abundant taxon in the same bioreactor, was found to degrade quinoline via 2-hydroxyquinoline. The end products and removal rate of quinoline by isolate YF3 largely varied according to the quantity of available oxygen. Specifically, quinoline could be converted only to 2-hydroxyquinoline without further transformation under insufficient oxygen conditions, e.g., less than 0.5% initial oxygen in the vials. However, resting YF3 cells aerobically precultured in medium with quinoline could anaerobically convert quinoline to 2-hydroxyquinoline. A two-strain consortium constructed with isolates from Thauera (R2) and Rhodococcus (YF3) demonstrated efficient denitrifying degradation of quinoline. Thus, we experimentally verified that the metabolic interaction based on 2-hydroxyquinoline cross-feeding between two predominant bacteria constitutes the main quinoline degradation mechanism. This work uncovers the mechanism of quinoline removal by two cooperative bacterial species existing in denitrifying bioreactors. IMPORTANCE We experimentally verified that the second most abundant taxon, Rhodococcus, played a role in degrading quinoline to 2-hydroxyquinoline, while the most abundant taxon, Thauera, degraded 2-hydroxyquinoline. Metabolites from Thauera further served to provide metabolites for Rhodococcus. Hence, an ecological guild composed of two isolates was assembled, revealing the different roles that keystone organisms play in the microbial community. This report, to the best of our knowledge, is the first on cross-feeding between the initial quinoline degrader and a second bacterium. Specifically, the quinoline degrader (Rhodococcus) did not benefit metabolically from quinoline degradation to 2-hydroxyquinoline but instead benefited from the metabolites produced by the second bacterium (Thauera) when Thauera degraded the 2-hydroxyquinoline. These results could be a significant step forward in the elucidation of the microbial mechanism underlying quinoline-denitrifying degradation.
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