2 research outputs found
Chemical Characterization of Low Molecular Weight Soluble Microbial Products in an Anaerobic Membrane Bioreactor
Effluents
from wastewater treatment systems contain a variety of
organic compounds, including end products from the degradation of
influent substrates, nonbiodegradable feed compounds, and soluble
microbial products (SMPs) produced by microbial metabolism. It is
important to identify the major components of these SMPs to understand
what is in wastewater effluents. In this study, physical pretreatments
to extract and concentrate low molecular weight SMPs (MW< 580 Da)
from effluents were optimized. Liquid–liquid extraction (LLE)
of a 200 mL effluent sample showed the best performance using a mixture
of <i>n</i>-hexane, chloroform, and dichloromethane (70
mL) for extraction. For solid phase extraction (SPE), two OasisHLB
cartridges were connected in-line to optimize recovery, and the eluted
samples from each cartridge were analyzed separately to avoid overlapping
peaks. Four solvents varying from polar to nonpolar (methanol, acetone,
dichloromethane, and <i>n</i>-hexane) were selected to maximize
the number of compound peaks eluted. A combination of SPE (OasisHLB)
followed by LLE was shown to maximize compound identification and
quantification. However, the compounds identified accounted for only
2.1 mg of chemical oxygen demand (COD)/L (16% of total SMP as COD)
because many SMPs have considerably higher MWs. Finally, the method
was validated by analyzing a variety of different reactor effluents
and feeds
Global Profiling of Metabolite and Lipid Soluble Microbial Products in Anaerobic Wastewater Reactor Supernatant Using UPLC–MS<sup>E</sup>
Identification
of soluble microbial products (SMPs) released during
bacterial metabolism in mixed cultures in bioreactors is essential
to understanding fundamental mechanisms of their biological production.
SMPs constitute one of the main foulants (together with colloids and
bacterial flocs) in membrane bioreactors widely used to treat and
ultimately recycle wastewater. More importantly, the composition and
origin of potentially toxic, carcinogenic, or mutagenic SMPs in renewable/reused
water supplies must be determined and controlled. Certain classes
of SMPs have previously been studied by GC–MS, LC–MS,
and MALDI-ToF MS; however, a more comprehensive LC–MS-based
method for SMP identification is currently lacking. Here we develop
a UPLC–MS approach to profile and identify metabolite SMPs
in the supernatant of an anaerobic batch bioreactor. The small biomolecules
were extracted into two fractions based on their polarity, and separate
methods were then used for the polar and nonpolar metabolites in the
aqueous and lipid fractions, respectively. SMPs that increased in
the supernatant after feed addition were identified primarily as phospholipids,
ceramides, with cardiolipins in the highest relative abundance, and
these lipids have not been previously reported in wastewater effluent