Author:
Xia Ming,Yu Dianzhen,Chen Han,Dai Jingcheng,Gao Na,Li Shuyang,Bi Xuezhi,Qiu Dongru
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The floc is a characteristic of microbial aggregate growth, displaying cloudy suspensions in water. Floc formation has been demonstrated in a series of bacteria and the floc-forming bacteria play a crucial role in activated sludge (AS) process widely used for municipal sewage and industrial wastewater treatment over a century. It has been demonstrated that some exopolysaccharide biosynthesis genes and the sigma factor (sigma54 or rpoN) were required for floc forming in some bacteria. However, the mechanism underlying the floc formation stills need to be elucidated.
Results
In this study, we demonstrate that a TPR (Tetratricopeptide repeats) protein-encoding gene prsT is required for floc formation of Aquincola tertiaricarbonis RN12 and an upstream PEP-CTERM gene (designated pepA), regulated by RpoN1, is involved in its floc formation but not swarming motility and biofilm formation. Overexpression of PepA could rescue the floc-forming phenotype of the rpoN1 mutant by decreasing the released soluble exopolysaccharides and increasing the bound polymers.
Conclusion
Our results indicate that the wide-spread PEP-CTERM proteins play an important role in the self-flocculation of bacterial cells and may be a component of extracellular polymeric substances required for floc-formation.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Innovative Research Team Foundation of the Department of Education of Hubei Province, China
Key Research and Development Program of Anhui Province
National Key R&D Program of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Microbiology