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research article

Assessment of bacterial and structural dynamics in aerobic granular sludge biofilms

Weissbrodt, David Gregory  
•
Neu, Thomas R.
•
Kuhlicke, Uthe
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2013
Frontiers in Microbiology

Aerobic granular sludge (AGS) is based on self-granulated flocs forming mobile biofilms with a gel-like consistence. Bacterial and structural dynamics from flocs to granules were followed in anaerobic-aerobic sequencing batch reactors (SBR) fed with synthetic wastewater, namely a bubble column (BC-SBR) operated under wash-out conditions for fast granulation, and two stirred-tank enrichments of Accumulibacter (PAO-SBR) and Competibacter (GAO-SBR) operated at steady-state. In the BC-SBR, granules formed within 2 weeks by swelling of Zoogloea colonies around flocs, developing subsequently smooth zoogloeal biofilms. However, Zoogloea predominance (37–79%) led to deteriorated nutrient removal during the first months of reactor operation. Upon maturation, improved nitrification (80–100%), nitrogen removal (43–83%), and high but unstable dephosphatation (75–100%) were obtained. Proliferation of dense clusters of nitrifiers, Accumulibacter, and Competibacter from granule cores outwards resulted in heterogeneous bioaggregates, inside which only low abundance Zoogloea (<5%) were detected in biofilm interstices. The presence of different extracellular glycoconjugates detected by fluorescence lectin-binding analysis showed the complex nature of the intracellular matrix of these granules. In the PAO-SBR, granulation occurred within two months with abundant and active Accumulibacter populations (56 ± 10%) that were selected under full anaerobic uptake of volatile fatty acids and that aggregated as dense clusters within heterogeneous granules. Flocs self-granulated in the GAO-SBR after 480 days during a period of over-aeration caused by biofilm growth on the oxygen sensor. Granules were dominated by heterogeneous clusters of Competibacter (37 ± 11%). Zoogloea were never abundant in biomass of both PAO- and GAO-SBRs. This study showed that Zoogloea, Accumulibacter, and Competibacter affiliates can form granules, and that the granulation mechanisms rely on the dominant population involved.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.3389/fmicb.2013.00175
Web of Science ID

WOS:000331275000001

Author(s)
Weissbrodt, David Gregory  
Neu, Thomas R.
Kuhlicke, Uthe
Rappaz, Yoan
Holliger, Christof  
Date Issued

2013

Publisher

Frontiers Research Foundation

Published in
Frontiers in Microbiology
Volume

4

Start page

175

Subjects

biological wastewater treatment

•

aerobic granular sludge

•

granular biofilm formation and structure

•

T-RFLP

•

pyrosequencing

•

CLSM

•

FISH

•

FLBA

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBE  
Available on Infoscience
December 17, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/97995
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