info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Microbiome network analysis of co-occurrence patterns in anaerobic co-digestion of sewage sludge and food waste
Fecha
2019-06-15Registro en:
Orellana, Esteban; Davies Sala, Carol Giselle; Guerrero, Leandro Demián; Vardé, Ignacio; Altina, Melisa Guadalupe; et al.; Microbiome network analysis of co-occurrence patterns in anaerobic co-digestion of sewage sludge and food waste; IWA Publishing; Water Science And Technology; 79; 10; 15-6-2019; 1956-1965
0273-1223
1996-9732
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Orellana, Esteban
Davies Sala, Carol Giselle
Guerrero, Leandro Demián
Vardé, Ignacio
Altina, Melisa Guadalupe
Lorenzo, María Cielo
Figuerola, Eva Lucia Margarita
Pontiggia, Rodrigo Martin
Erijman, Leonardo
Resumen
Addition of food waste (FW) as a co-substrate in anaerobic digesters of wastewater treatment plants is a desirable strategy towards achievement of the potential of wastewater treatment plants to become energy-neutral, diverting at the same time organic waste from landfills. Because substrate type is a driver of variations in phylogenetic structure of digester microbiomes, it is critical to understand how microbial communities respond to changes in substrate composition and concentration. In this work, high throughput sequencing was used to monitor the dynamics of microbiome changes in four parallel lab-scale anaerobic digesters treating sewage sludge during acclimation to an increasing amount of food waste. A co-occurrence network was constructed using data from 49 metagenomes sampled over the 161 days of the digesters´ operation. More than half of the nodes in the network were clustered in two major modules, i.e. groups of highly interconnected taxa that had much fewer connections with taxa outside the group. The dynamics of co-occurrence networks evidenced shifts that occurred within microbial communities due to the addition of food waste in the co-digestion process. A diverse and reproducible group of hydrolytic and fermentative bacteria, syntrophic bacteria and methanogenic archaea appeared to grow in a concerted fashion to allow stable performance of anaerobic co-digestion at high FW.