Two hydrogen-producing continuous flow stirred tank reactors (CSTRs) fed respectively with glucose and sucrose were investigated by polymerase chain reaction-denatured gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE) and fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH). The substrate was fed in a continuous mode decreased from hydraulic retention time (HRT) 10 hours to 6, 5, 4, 3, and 2 hours. Quantitative fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH) observations further demonstrated that two morphotypes of bacteria dominated both microbial communities. One was long rod bacteria which can be targeted either by Chis150 probe designed to hybridize the gram positive low G + C bacteria or the specific oligonucleotide probe Lg10-6. The probe Lg10-6, affiliated with Clostridium pasteurianum, was designed and then checked with other reference organisms. The other type, unknown group, which cannot be detected by Chis150 was curved rod bacteria. Notably, the population ratios of the two predominant groups reflected the different operational performance of the two reactors, such as hydrogen producing rates, substrate turnover rates and metabolites compositions. Therefore, a competition mode of the two dominant bacteria groups was hypothesized. In the study, 16S rRNA-based gene library of hydrogen-producing microbial communities was established. The efficiency of hydrogen yields was correlated with substrates (glucose or sucrose), HRT, metabolites compositions (acetate, propionate, butyrate and ethanol), thermal pre-treatment (seed biomass was heated at 100°C for 45 minutes), and microbial communities in the bioreactor, not sludge sources (municipal sewage sludge, alcohol-processing sludge, or bean-processing sludge). The designed specific oligonucleotide probe Lg10-6 also provides us a useful and fast molecular tool to screen hydrogen-producing microbial communities in the future research.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Research Article|
May 01 2009
Quantitative fluorescent in-situ hybridization: a hypothesized competition mode between two dominant bacteria groups in hydrogen-producing anaerobic sludge processes
C.-L. Huang;
1Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Central University, No.300, Jung-da Road, Chung-Li City, Taoyuan, 320, Taiwan E-mail: chunlinhuang@berkeley.edu; eseliuwt@nus.edu.sg
2Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA E-mail: chunlinhuang@berkeley.edu
E-mail: chunlinhuang@berkeley.edu
Search for other works by this author on:
C.-C. Chen;
C.-C. Chen
3Department of Environmental Engineering and Science, Feng Chia University, No. 100 Wenhwa Road, Seatwen, Taichung 40724, Taiwan E-mail: ccchen@dragon.ccut.edu.tw; cylin@fcu.edu.tw
4Department of Landscape Architecture, ChungChou Institute of Technology, 6, Lane 2, Sec.3, Shan-Chiao Rd, Yuanlin, Changhwa 51003, Taiwan E-mail: ccchen@dragon.ccut.edu.tw
Search for other works by this author on:
C.-Y. Lin;
C.-Y. Lin
3Department of Environmental Engineering and Science, Feng Chia University, No. 100 Wenhwa Road, Seatwen, Taichung 40724, Taiwan E-mail: ccchen@dragon.ccut.edu.tw; cylin@fcu.edu.tw
Search for other works by this author on:
W.-T. Liu
W.-T. Liu
1Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering, National Central University, No.300, Jung-da Road, Chung-Li City, Taoyuan, 320, Taiwan E-mail: chunlinhuang@berkeley.edu; eseliuwt@nus.edu.sg
5Environmental Science & Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, National University of Singapore, 9 Engineering Drive 1, EA-03-12, Singapore 117576, Singapore E-mail: eseliuwt@nus.edu.sg
Search for other works by this author on:
Water Sci Technol (2009) 59 (10): 1901–1909.
Citation
C.-L. Huang, C.-C. Chen, C.-Y. Lin, W.-T. Liu; Quantitative fluorescent in-situ hybridization: a hypothesized competition mode between two dominant bacteria groups in hydrogen-producing anaerobic sludge processes. Water Sci Technol 1 May 2009; 59 (10): 1901–1909. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2009.201
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Impact Factor 1.915
CiteScore 3.3 • Q2
13 days submission to first
decision
1,439,880 downloads in 2021