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Relative weight of organic waste origin on compost and digestate 16S rRNA gene bacterial profilings and related functional inferences

Authors :
Aigle, Axel
Bourgeois, Emilie
Marjolet, Laurence
Houot, Sabine
Patureau, Dominique
Doelsch, Emmanuel
Cournoyer, Benoit
Galia, Wessam
Aigle, Axel
Bourgeois, Emilie
Marjolet, Laurence
Houot, Sabine
Patureau, Dominique
Doelsch, Emmanuel
Cournoyer, Benoit
Galia, Wessam
Source :
Frontiers in Microbiology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Even though organic waste (OW) recycling via anaerobic digestion (AD) and composting are increasingly used, little is known about the impact of OW origin (fecal matters and food and vegetable wastes) on the end products' bacterial contents. The hypothesis of a predictable bacterial community structure in the end products according to the OW origin was tested. Nine OW treatment plants were selected to assess the genetic structure of bacterial communities found in raw OW according to their content in agricultural and urban wastes and to estimate their modifications through AD and composting. Two main bacterial community structures among raw OWs were observed and matched a differentiation according to the occurrences of urban chemical pollutants. Composting led to similar 16S rRNA gene OTU profiles whatever the OW origin. With a significant shift of about 140 genera (representing 50% of the bacteria), composting was confirmed to largely shape bacterial communities toward similar structures. The enriched taxa were found to be involved in detoxification and bioremediation activities. This process was found to be highly selective and favorable for bacterial specialists. Digestates showed that OTU profiles differentiated into two groups according to their relative content in agricultural (manure) and urban wastes (mainly activated sludge). About one third of the bacterial taxa was significantly affected by AD. In digestates of urban OW, this sorting led to an enrichment of 32 out of the 50 impacted genera, while for those produced from agricultural or mixed urban/agricultural OW (called central OW), a decay of 54 genera over 60 was observed. Bacteria from activated sludge appeared more fit for AD than those of other origins. Functional inferences showed AD enriched genera from all origins to share similar functional traits, e.g., chemoheterotrophy and fermentation, while being often taxonomically distinct. The main functional traits among the dominant genera in activated s

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Frontiers in Microbiology
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1262253135
Document Type :
Electronic Resource