Ammonia
Monooxygenase-Mediated Cometabolic Biotransformation and Hydroxylamine-Mediated
Abiotic Transformation of Micropollutants in an AOB/NOB Coculture
posted on 2018-07-13, 00:00authored byYaochun Yu, Ping Han, Li-Jun Zhou, Zhong Li, Michael Wagner, Yujie Men
Biotransformation of various micropollutants
(MPs) has been found to be positively correlated with nitrification
in activated sludge communities. To further elucidate the roles played
by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and nitrite-oxidizing bacteria
(NOB), we investigated the biotransformation capabilities of an NOB
pure culture (Nitrobacter sp.) and an AOB (Nitrosomonas europaea)/NOB (Nitrobacter sp.) coculture for 15 MPs, whose biotransformation was reported
previously to be associated with nitrification. The NOB pure culture
did not biotransform any investigated MP, whereas the AOB/NOB coculture
was capable of biotransforming six MPs (i.e., asulam, bezafibrate,
fenhexamid, furosemide, indomethacin, and rufinamide). Transformation
products (TPs) were identified, and tentative structures were proposed.
Inhibition studies with octyne, an ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) inhibitor,
suggested that AMO was the responsible enzyme for MP transformation
that occurred cometabolically. For the first time, hydroxylamine,
a key intermediate of all aerobic ammonia oxidizers, was found to
react with several MPs at concentrations typically occurring in AOB
batch cultures. All of these MPs were also biotransformed by the AOB/NOB
coculture. Moreover, the same asulam TPs were detected in both biotransformation
and hydroxylamine-treated abiotic transformation experiments, whereas
rufinamide TPs formed from biological transformation were not detected
during hydroxylamine-mediated abiotic transformation, which was consistent
with the inability of rufinamide abiotic transformation by hydroxylamine.
Thus, in addition to cometabolism likely carried out by AMO, an abiotic
transformation route indirectly mediated by AMO might also contribute
to MP biotransformation by AOB.