Cadaverine and putrescine exposure influence carbon and nitrogen cycling genes in water and sediment of the Yellow River

被引:0
|
作者
Su, Wanghong [1 ]
Yu, Qiaoling [1 ]
Yang, Jiawei [1 ]
Han, Qian [1 ]
Wang, Sijie [1 ]
Heděnec, Petr [2 ]
Wang, Xiaochen [1 ]
Wan-Yan, Ruijun [1 ]
Li, Huan [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] School of Public Health, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou,730000, China
[2] Institute for Tropical Biodiversity and Sustainable Development, University Malaysia Terengganu, Terengganu, Kuala Nerus,21030, Malaysia
[3] State Key Laboratory of Grassland Agro-ecosystems, Center for Grassland Microbiome, College of pastoral agriculture science and technology, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou,730000, China
来源
Journal of Environmental Sciences (China) | 2024年 / 142卷
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Biogeochemistry - Carbon - Nitrogen - River pollution - Sediments;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The response patterns of microbial functional genes involved in biogeochemical cycles to cadaver decay is a central topic of recent environmental sciences. However, the response mechanisms and pathways of the functional genes associated with the carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling to cadaveric substances such as cadaverine and putrescine remain unclear. This study explored the variation of functional genes associated with C fixation, C degradation and N cycling and their influencing factors under cadaverine, putrescine and mixed treatments. Our results showed only putrescine significantly increased the alpha diversity of C fixation genes, while reducing the alpha diversity of N cycling genes in sediment. For the C cycling, the mixed treatment significantly decreased the total abundance of reductive acetyl-CoA pathway genes (i.e., acsB and acsE) and lig gene linked to lignin degradation in water, while only significantly increasing the hydroxypropionate-hydroxybutylate cycle (i.e., accA) gene abundance in sediment. For the N cycling, mixed treatment significantly decreased the abundance of the nitrification (i.e., amoB), denitrification (i.e., nirS3) genes in water and the assimilation pathway gene (i.e., gdhA) in sediment. Environmental factors (i.e., total carbon and total nitrogen) were all negatively associated with the genes of C and N cycling. Therefore, cadaverine and putrescine exposure may inhibit the pathway in C fixation and N cycling, while promoting C degradation. These findings can offer some new insight for the management of amine pollution caused by animal cadavers. © 2023
引用
收藏
页码:236 / 247
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cadaverine and putrescine exposure influence carbon and nitrogen cycling genes in water and sediment of the Yellow River
    Su, Wanghong
    Yu, Qiaoling
    Yang, Jiawei
    Han, Qian
    Wang, Sijie
    Hedenec, Petr
    Wang, Xiaochen
    Wan-Yan, Ruijun
    Li, Huan
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES, 2024, 142 : 236 - 247
  • [2] Multi-omics methods reveal that putrescine and cadaverine cause different degrees of enrichment of high-risk resistomes and opportunistic pathogens in the water and sediment of the Yellow River
    Su, Wanghong
    Wang, Xiaocheng
    Yang, Jiawei
    Yu, Qiaoling
    Li, Xiaoshan
    Zhang, Shiheng
    Li, Huan
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2023, 219
  • [3] Carbon and nitrogen cycling in a vegetated lowland chalk river impacted by sediment
    Trimmer, M.
    Sanders, I. A.
    Heppell, C. M.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2009, 23 (15) : 2225 - 2238
  • [4] Influence of water and sediment change of the Yellow River on the automatic adjustment of alluvial river
    Qian, YY
    Zhang, LR
    RIVER SEDIMENTATION: THEORY AND APPLICATIONS, 1999, : 813 - 818
  • [5] The impacts of water-sediment regulation on organic carbon in the Yellow River
    Li, Yuhong
    Wang, Mingshi
    Zhang, Dong
    Wang, Fushun
    Jiang, Hao
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2024, 918
  • [6] Influence of Water and Sediment Regulation in the Yellow River on the Delta Wetland Ecosystem
    Jiang Xiaohui
    Lei Hongjun
    Jiang Zhen
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 4TH INTERNATIONAL YELLOW RIVER FORUM ON ECOLOGICAL CIVILIZATION AND RIVER ETHICS, VOL II, 2010, : 44 - +
  • [7] The effects of land use patterns on carbon and nitrogen cycling microbe in a river of the upper reaches of the Yellow River
    Ye, Ling
    Huang, Jing-Jie
    Yin, Qiong-Lin
    Xie, Lei
    Bai, Xue
    Pang, Qing-Qing
    Zhao, Ju
    Yang, Wei-Gong
    Peng, Fu-Quan
    Zhu, Xiang
    Yang, Fei
    Wang, Long-Mian
    Zhongguo Huanjing Kexue/China Environmental Science, 2024, 44 (12): : 6846 - 6857
  • [8] Metagenomic analysis of nitrogen-cycling genes in upper Mississippi river sediment with mussel assemblages
    Black, Ellen M.
    Chimenti, Michael S.
    Just, Craig L.
    MICROBIOLOGYOPEN, 2019, 8 (05):
  • [9] Budgets of sediment nitrogen and carbon cycling in the shallow water of Knebel Vig, Denmark
    Lomstein, BA
    Jensen, AGU
    Hansen, JW
    Andreasen, JB
    Hansen, LS
    Berntsen, J
    Kunzendorf, H
    AQUATIC MICROBIAL ECOLOGY, 1998, 14 (01) : 69 - 80
  • [10] Influence of florfenicol on nitrogen cycling in marine sediment
    Zong, Hu-Min
    Hu, Jiang-Tao
    Wang, Ju-Ying
    Ma, De-Yi
    Dalian Haishi Daxue Xuebao/Journal of Dalian Maritime University, 2007, 33 (03): : 78 - 81