Abstract

The cold-adapted bacterium Pseudomonas putida Y-9 was investigated and exhibited excellent capability for nitrogen removal at 15°C. The strain capable of heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification could efficiently remove ammonium, nitrate, and nitrite at an average removal rate of 2.85 mg, 1.60 mg, and 1.83 mg NL−1 h−1, respectively. Strain Y-9 performed nitrification in preference to denitrification when ammonium and nitrate or ammonium and nitrite coexisted in the solution. Meantime, the presence of nitrate had no effect on the ammonium removal rate of strain Y-9, and yet the presence of high concentration of nitrite would inhibit the cell growth and decrease the nitrification rate. The experimental results indicate that P. putida Y-9 has potential application for the treatment of wastewater containing high concentrations of ammonium along with its oxidation products at low temperature.

1. Introduction

Excess nitrogen concentration, often in the form of nitrate and ammonium, would lead to eutrophication of water. And this would affect the balance of natural water ecosystems, even human health [1]. Therefore, excessive nitrogen has become a growing concern. In recent years, biological treatment is recognized as the prevailing method because of its high efficiency, lower maintenance costs, and environmental friendliness. Conventional processes of ammonium removal involved nitrification by aerobic autotrophic organisms and denitrification by anaerobic heterotrophic organisms. However, such systems are time-consuming and inconvenience for management and operation due to the low rate of nitrification and the complexity of separating aerobic and anoxic tanks [2]. To date, microbes which have the ability to convert ammonium compounds to gaseous products and remove organic matter simultaneously under aerobic conditions are found and isolated. That is to say, these microorganisms, such as Providencia rettgeri YL [3], Bacillus methylotrophicus strain L7 [4], Alcaligenes faecalis strain number 4 [5], and V. diabolicus SF16 [6], have the ability to perform simultaneously heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification in a single reactor, which will reduce the space demand and improve the efficiency of nitrogen removal significantly [7].

Nevertheless, the growth and bioactivity of microorganisms are affected significantly by temperature. Previous research has shown that both nitrification and denitrification would be inhibited strongly at temperatures below 20°C [8, 9]. Most of the denitrifiers reported previously can only have potential applications for wastewater treatment systems at moderate temperature. Thus, these denitrifiers cannot be applied to wastewater treatment at cold conditions because of their too sensitivity to low temperature. In addition, accumulation of nitrite or nitrate, which has potential threat to the safety of water zoology and drinking water due to their high toxicity, was observed during heterotrophic nitrification [1012]. In that case, it is urgent to discover more denitrifiers capable of adapting to low temperature and producing less intermediate.

In our previous study [13], a novel hypothermia aerobic nitrite-denitrifying bacterium, strain Y-9, was isolated from the long-term flooded paddy soil and identified as Pseudomonas putida. And P. Putida Y-9 exhibited an excellent performance of denitrification with a low concentration of nitrite at low temperature. But its ability of heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification with other nitrogen compounds was unclear. In the study, the nitrogen removal performance of strain Y-9 with high concentrations of ammonium, nitrate, nitrite, and organic nitrogen was investigated at 15°C, and the characteristics of nitrification and denitrification were assessed by analyzing the intermediate products during the nitrification and denitrification process. The results indicated that strain Y-9 is the heterotrophic nitrifying-aerobic denitrifying psychrophile bacteria and could quickly remove high concentration ammonium in wastewater. Although several strains belong to P. putida are reported as heterotrophic nitrifier [14] or aerobic denitrifier [15], they are all mesophilic bacteria. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report about P. putida capable of heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification at low temperature. All attempts above would be applied to elucidate the nitrogen removal characteristics of strain Y-9. And strain Y-9 might enhance aerobic denitrification activity of indigenous bacteria by quickly decreasing ammonium concentration in wastewater, especially cold wastewater.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Microorganism

Strain Y-9 was isolated from the long-term flooded paddy soil and successfully identified as Pseudomonas putida and used for the investigation on nitrogen removal performance.

2.2. Media

Heterotrophic nitrification medium (HNM) [16] contained (per liter) 7.0 g K2HPO4, 3.0 g KH2PO4, 0.1 g MgSO4·7H2O, 1.0 g (NH4)2SO4, 0.05 g FeSO4·7H2O, and 10 g CH3COONa, pH 7.2. HNM was used to measure the nitrification ability of strain Y-9. Aerobic denitrification medium (ADM) contained (per liter) 7.0 g K2HPO4, 3.0 g KH2PO4, 0.1 g MgSO4·7H2O, 1.45 g KNO3 (ADM-1) or 0.986 g NaNO2 (ADM-2), 0.05 g FeSO4·7H2O, and 10 g CH3COONa, pH 7.2. ADM was used to test the aerobic denitrification ability of strain Y-9. Tryptone (1.575 g/L) was used instead of inorganic nitrogen in the ADM to detect the aerobic denitrification ability of strain Y-9 with organic nitrogen. Simultaneous nitrification and denitrification medium (SNDM) consisted of the following components (per liter): 7.0 g K2HPO4, 3.0 g KH2PO4, 0.1 g MgSO4·7H2O, 1.0 g (NH4)2SO4, 1.45 g KNO3 (SNDM-1) or 0.986 g NaNO2 (SNDM-2), 0.05 g FeSO4·7H2O, and 10 g CH3COONa, pH 7.2. SNDM-1 and SNDM-2 were used to analyze simultaneous heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification capability of strain Y-9. Luria-Bertani (LB) medium contained (per liter) 10 g tryptone, 5 g yeast extract, and 10 g NaCl, pH 7.5.

All chemicals were of analytical grade. And conical flasks (250 ml capacity) containing 100 ml medium was autoclaved for 30 min at 121°C.

2.3. Assessment of Nitrogen Removal Capability with Different Nitrogen Source

Single colony of Y-9 was cultivated for 36 h in 100 ml sterile LB broth medium at 15°C and 150 rpm. After 36 h cultivation, the strain cell in 8 ml cultivation medium was harvested by centrifuging at 4000 rpm for 8 min and washed once with sterile water. The pellets were inoculated into 100 ml HNM, ADM-1, ADM-2, organic medium, SNDM-1, or SNDM-2, respectively. The cultures were incubated at 15°C with 150 rpm shaking speed for 4 days. And the medium without inoculation was used as control. During incubation, the different cultures were sampled to determine the concentration of -N, -N, -N, TN, and optical density (OD600) at 24 intervals. All experiments were conducted in triplicate.

2.4. Analytical Methods

Cell density was tested OD600 by using a spectrophotometer (DU800, Beckman Coulter, USA). Total nitrogen was calculated by the absorbance value at 220 nm subtracting the two times background absorbance value at 275 nm after using alkaline potassium persulfate digestion. Ammonium, nitrate, and nitrite were detected using the supernatant after samples centrifuged at 8000 rpm for 5 min. Ammonium nitrogen was analyzed by indophenols blue method. Nitrate was calculated by the absorbance value at 220 nm subtracting the two times background absorbance value at 275 nm. The concentration of -N was determined by N-(1-naphthalene)-diaminoethane spectrophotometry method according to the State Environmental Protection Administration of China [14].

2.5. Statistical Analysis and Graphical Work

Statistical analysis and graphical work were carried out by using Excel, SPSS Statistics, and Origin 8.6. The results were presented as means ± SD (standard deviation of means).

3. Results and Discussions

3.1. Ammonium Removal Performance of Strain Y-9 at Low Temperature

To assess heterotrophic nitrification with ammonium of strain Y-9 at low temperature, strain Y-9 was cultivated in the HNM at 15°C. The growth curve and ammonium removal capability of strain Y-9 were shown in Figure 1. Strain Y-9 grew quickly from 1 d to 2 d, and OD600 reached 1.644 at 2 d, which was higher than that of Pseudomonas fluorescens wsw-1001 at 48 h with an OD600 of 0.554 under the same conditions [15]. This showed that strain Y-9 well adapted to low temperatures. Subsequently, strain Y-9 reached the stationary phase. After 3 d of incubation, the concentration of ammonium nitrogen decreased dramatically from 208.94 mg/L to 3.56 mg/L, and 98.3% of ammonium removal was achieved. The average nitrification rate of strain Y-9 was approximately 2.85 mg -N/L/h, which was observably higher than that of heterotrophic nitrification-aerobic denitrification bacterium Aeromonas sp. HN-02 possessed an average rate of 2.32 mg -N/L/h at the same temperature [17].

Furthermore, it was attractive that ammonium removal performance of strain Y-9 at low temperature was even better than most bacterial at moderate temperature (around 30°C), such as P. alcaligenes AS-1 (1.15 mg -N/L/h) [18], Diaphorobacter sp. PD-7 (1.61 mg -N/L/h) [19], and Marinobacter strain NNA5 (1.23 mg -N/L/h) [20]. The concentration of total nitrogen reduced observably from 216.10 mg/L to 152.08 mg/L, and the removal efficiency was 29.6% during ammonium removal process. Meanwhile, a maximum -N concentration of 0.31 mg/L was detected and then declined, and nitrate was undetectable during the whole process. This would be a significant advantage in practical application of ammonium removal to avoid high accumulation of nitrification products under low temperature. Additionally, the production of gaseous nitrogen by strain Y-9 might be via the intermediate nitrite when ammonium was used as the sole nitrogen source. Similar result had been reported on Vibrio diabolicus SF16 [6] and Zobellella taiwanensis DN-7 [21] in which the intermediate nitrite was only detected in trace amounts and nitrate was not observed during heterotrophic nitrification. Nevertheless, nitrite was undetected, and trace accumulation of nitrate was observed during the ammonium removal process by Acinetobacter sp. Y16 [22]. In addition, dominant accumulation of nitrite and nitrate were produced by Rhodococcus sp. CPZ24 [23], Marinobacter sp. F6 [24], and Chryseobacterium sp. R31 [2] in the process of nitrification. The experimental results indicated that strain Y-9 could efficiently utilize ammonium to conduct nitrification coupled with aerobic denitrification at low temperature, which is of great benefit to enhance aerobic denitrification activity of indigenous bacteria by quickly decreasing ammonium concentration in wastewater, especially cold wastewater.

3.2. Nitrate Removal Performance of Strain Y-9 at Low Temperature

To demonstrate the denitrification by strain Y-9 at low temperature, KNO3 was used as the sole nitrogen source in the ADM-1 at 15°C. Figure 2 showed the growth curve and nitrate removal characteristic of strain Y-9. A significant decrease of nitrate was observed from 1 d to 3 d as the OD600 increased from 0.235 to 1.748, and cell growth reached the stationary phase after 3 d. By 4 d of cultivation, approximately 74.7% of nitrate nitrogen (205.63 mg/L initial -N) and 18.3% of total nitrogen (212.36 mg/L initial TN) were removed. The average denitrification rate of strain Y-9 was 1.60 mg -N/L/h, which was similar to that of P. migulae AN-1 which possessed an average rate of 1.57 mg -N/L/h at 10°C [25]. Meanwhile, nitrite was only detected in trace amounts, which was discrepant from the report that the dominant accumulation of nitrite was observed during the removal of nitrate [7, 26]. This may be due to the high nitrite reductase activity of strain Y-9.

In addition, ammonium nitrogen gradually increased from 1 d to 4 d, and the final concentration was approximately 8.04 mg/L. This phenomenon was different from the report that the production of ammonium might be the decomposition of cell, and part of nitrogen containing in the cell was released into the medium in senescent phases [27]. Therefore, the process of dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) might present in strain Y-9, but this requires further investigation. In previous reports, Su et al. [28] firstly reported that P. alcaliphila strain MBR could conduct denitrification and DNRA simultaneously with an electrode as the sole electron donor in bioelectrochemical systems (BESs), but not in an open culture. The experimental results indicated that strain Y-9 could perform denitrification with nitrate at low temperature.

3.3. Nitrite Removal Performance of Strain Y-9 at Low Temperature

Denitrification performance of strain Y-9 with nitrite (NaNO2) as the sole nitrogen source was evaluated. Figure 3 showed the growth curve and nitrite removal characteristic of strain Y-9 in the ADM-2 at 15°C. A significant decrease in -N by strain Y-9 was observed. The growth of strain Y-9 slowly increased at the initial 2 d. Subsequently, the -N was rapidly reduced, and OD600 reached 1.775 at 4 d. By 4 d of cultivation, the concentration of total nitrogen decreased dramatically from 214.12 mg/L to 97.45 mg/L, and approximately 54.5% of total nitrogen was removed. Meantime, 85.6% of nitrite (205.32 mg/L initial -N) was removed. The average denitrification rate of strain Y-9 was approximately 1.83 mg -N/L/h, which was higher than that of Pseudomonas sp. yy7 which possessed an average rate of 0.76 mg -N/L/h [29]. Nitrate was undetectable during the whole process.

The concentration of ammonium nitrogen gradually increased to 6.43 mg/L from 1 d to 4 d. Similarly, the process of dissimilatory nitrite reduction to ammonium might occur in strain Y-9. Moreover, the higher nitrogen removal efficiency was achieved with nitrite as the nitrogen source compared with nitrate. The similar performance was reported on strain 1 [30] and P. migulae AN-1 [25]. On the contrary, nitrite reduction rate of Bacillus sp. LY [31] and Pseudomonas stutzeri T13 [32] was much lower than the nitrate removal rate under aerobic conditions. The results above showed that strain Y-9 exhibited the higher removal performance on nitrite compared with nitrate at low temperature.

3.4. Assessment of Organic Nitrogen Removal Performance by Strain Y-9 at Low Temperature

Organic nitrogen is a kind of pollutant in the wastewater. In the present study, strain Y-9 grew well in the organic nitrogen medium at low temperature. Figure 4 illustrated the cell growth curve and nitrogen removal characteristics of strain Y-9 with tryptone as the organic nitrogen source at 15°C. Tryptone is a compound containing amino acids, ammonium, nitrate, and so on. Strain Y-9 grew well in the medium, and OD600 gradually increased to 1.77 at 4 d. By 4 d of cultivation, 26.7 mg/L of total nitrogen was removed, and approximately 11.8% of total nitrogen was removed, which denoted that strain Y-9 could utilize tryptone for cell growth, but hardly convert it to nitrogenous gas.

3.5. Assessment of Simultaneous Nitrification and Denitrification Performance by Strain Y-9 in the SNDM-1 at Low Temperature

Biological simultaneous nitrification and denitrification is a more efficient and economic method for nitrogen removal from wastewater [33]. Strain Y-9 could perform heterotrophic nitrification and denitrification separately under aerobic conditions. To evaluate aerobic simultaneous nitrification and denitrification performance of strain Y-9 at low temperature, strain Y-9 was cultivated in the SNDM-1 with (NH4)2SO4 and KNO3 as the nitrogen sources at 15°C. Figure 5 showed the growth curve and nitrogen removal characteristics of strain Y-9 at 15°C. Strain Y-9 grew quickly from 1 d to 3 d and then reached the stationary phase. In the meantime, the concentration of ammonium decreased dramatically during the log phase. Furthermore, approximately 100% of ammonium nitrogen (204.72 mg/L initial -N) was completely removed after 3 d of cultivation, and the average nitrification rate of strain Y-9 was 2.84 mg -N/L/h, which was almost equivalent to that of ammonium as the sole nitrogen source. Thus, the presence of nitrate had no material impact on the nitrification rate of strain Y-9, which was obviously different from previous report that the presence of nitrate could decrease the nitrification rate [34].

Nevertheless, the removal rate of nitrate was far lower than that of nitrate as the single nitrogen source, and removal efficiency of nitrate was only 6.4% after 4 d of cultivation. This phenomenon was consistent with the report that Rhodococcus sp. HY-1 utilized ammonium preferentially when ammonium and nitrate coexisted in the medium, and nitrate could be utilized when ammonium was completely exhausted under aerobic conditions. However, this result was different from the report that Klebsiella pneumoniae CF-S9 had the ability to achieve simultaneous removal of ammonium and nitrate, and nitrate removal rate was higher than that of ammonium when ammonium and nitrate coexisted in the medium [35]. There was only trace accumulation of nitrite, and about 56.82 mg/L of TN was converted to gaseous nitrogen during the nitrification and denitrification process of strain Y-9. All above results indicated that strain Y-9 conducted nitrification in preference to denitrification when ammonium and nitrate coexisted in the medium under aerobic conditions at low temperature.

3.6. Assessment of Simultaneous Nitrification and Denitrification Performance by Strain Y-9 in the SNDM-2 at Low Temperature

The capability of simultaneous nitrification and denitrification by strain Y-9 with (NH4)2SO4 and NaNO2 as the nitrogen sources at 15°C was plotted in Figure 6. Strain Y-9 grew very slowly, and OD600 only slightly increased to 0.232 at 4 d, which correlated well with the low nitrogen removal efficiency. Hence, the concentration of ammonium nitrogen decreased inconspicuously from 203.43 mg/L to 188.13 mg/L, and only 7.5% of ammonium was removed after 4 d of cultivation. The average nitrification rate of strain Y-9 was 0.16 mg -N/L/h, which was much less than that of ammonium or nitrite as the nitrogen source. Moreover, nitrate was undetectable during the whole process, and 203.58 mg/L initial -N was almost unchanged, which was inconsistent with the report that the presence of ammonium together with nitrite could promote the nitrite removal efficiency by Marichromatium gracile YL28 [34] or promote the ammonium removal efficiency by Pseudomonas sp. qy37 [36]. This phenomenon was consistent with the report that the nitrification rate of A. Faecalis TUD would be inhibited from the presence of nitrite [37]. However, nitrogen removal performance of strain Y-9 was contrary to P. versutus LYM, which could synchronize ammonium removal with nitrite removal and could not reduce nitrite when nitrite was used as the sole nitrogen source even in presence of enough carbon source [38].

Strain Y-9 could simultaneously reduce ammonium and its nitrification product (nitrite) when ammonium was used as the sole nitrogen source. But ammonium and adscititious nitrite could not be removed synchronously by strain Y-9. This might be explained in that enzyme activity (such as ammonia monooxygenase) related to the nitrification could be inhibited from the presence of high concentration of nitrite, thereby affecting the ammonium nitrogen removal. The results indicated that the presence of high concentration of nitrite would restrain the cell growth and decrease the ammonium removal.

4. Conclusion

In this study, Pseudomonas putida Y-9 could perform heterotrophic nitrification with ammonium and aerobic denitrification with nitrate or nitrite at 15°C. The strain could efficiently remove ammonium, nitrate, and nitrite at average removal rate of 2.85 mg, 1.60 mg, and 1.83 mg NL−1 h−1, respectively. Strain Y-9 performed nitrification in preference to denitrification when ammonium and nitrate or ammonium and nitrite coexisted in the solution. Meantime, the presence of nitrate had no impact on the nitrification rate of strain Y-9. However, the presence of high concentration of nitrite could suppress cell growth and lower the nitrification rate. In addition, the process of dissimilatory nitrate or nitrite reduction to ammonium (DNRA) might present in strain Y-9. The results indicated that P. putida Y-9 has potential application for wastewater treatment of nitrogen pollution under cold temperature conditions. What is more, the nitrogen transformation mechanism of strain Y-9 needs further research.

Competing Interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the National Key Research and Developmental Program of China (no. 2016YFC0502303).