Viral community distribution, assembly mechanism, and associated hosts in an industrial park wastewater treatment plant.

Environ Res

School of Resources and Environmental Engineering, Anhui University, Hefei, 230601, China; Anhui Shengjin Lake Wetland Ecology National Long-term Scientific Research Base, Dongzhi, 247230, China. Electronic address:

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Viruses play a critical role in shaping bacterial communities and the efficiency of wastewater treatment, with significant variations in their composition across different treatment units of a large-scale industrial park WWTP.
  • - Metagenomic analysis revealed that dominant viral groups include Uroviricota and Nucleocytoviricota, and their abundance is affected by environmental factors, showing a decrease in anaerobic tanks but an increase in activated sludge.
  • - The study highlights Acidobacteria as a key sensitive host for viruses in wastewater, indicating a need for further investigation into how viral communities evolve and their ecological impacts in wastewater treatment processes.

Article Abstract

Viruses manipulate bacterial community composition and impact wastewater treatment efficiency. Some viruses pose threats to the environment and human populations through infection. Improving the efficiency of wastewater treatment and ensuring the health of the effluent and receptor pools requires an understanding of how viral communities assemble and interact with hosts in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). We used metagenomic analysis to study the distribution, assembly mechanism, and sensitive hosts for the viral communities in raw water, anaerobic tanks, and returned activated sludge units of a large-scale industrial park WWTP. Uroviricota (53.42% ± 0.14%) and Nucleocytoviricota (26.1% ± 0.19%) were dominant in all units. Viral community composition significantly differed between units, as measured by β diversity (P = 0.005). Compared to raw water, the relative viral abundance decreased by 29.8% in the anaerobic tank but increased by 9.9% in the activated sludge. Viral community assembly in raw water and anaerobic tanks was predominantly driven by deterministic processes (MST <0.5) versus stochastic processes (MST >0.5) in the activated sludge, indicating that differences in diffusion limits may fundamentally alter the assembly mechanisms of viral communities between the solid and liquid-phase environments. Acidobacteria was identified as the sensitive host contributing to viral abundance, exhibiting strong interactions and a mutual dependence (degree = 59). These results demonstrate the occurrence and prevalence of viruses in WWTPs, their different assembly mechanism, and sensitive hosts. These observations require further study of the mechanisms of viral community succession, ecological function, and roles in the successive wastewater treatment units.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2024.118156DOI Listing

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