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Featured researches published by Yunhong Kong.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Identity and ecophysiology of uncultured actinobacterial polyphosphate-accumulating organisms in full-scale enhanced biological phosphorus removal plants.

Yunhong Kong; Jeppe Lund Nielsen; Per Halkjær Nielsen

ABSTRACT Microautoradiography combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization (MAR-FISH) was used to screen for potential polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAO) in a full-scale enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) plant. The results showed that, in addition to uncultured Rhodocyclus-related PAO, two morphotypes hybridizing with gene probes for the gram-positive Actinobacteria were also actively involved in uptake of orthophosphate (Pi). Clone library analysis and further investigations by MAR-FISH using two new oligonucleotide probes revealed that both morphotypes, cocci in clusters of tetrads and short rods in clumps, were relatively closely related to the genus Tetrasphaera within the family Intrasporangiaceae of the Actinobacteria (93 to 98% similarity in their 16S rRNA genes). FISH analysis of the community biomass in the treatment plant investigated showed that the short rods (targeted by probe Actino-658) were the most abundant (12% of all Bacteria hybridizing with general bacterial probes), while the cocci in tetrads (targeted by probe Actino-221) made up 7%. Both morphotypes took up Pi aerobically only if, in a previous anaerobic phase, they had taken up organic matter from wastewater or a mixture of amino acids. They could not take up short-chain fatty acids (e.g., acetate), glucose, or ethanol under anaerobic or aerobic conditions. The storage compound produced during the anaerobic period was not polyhydroxyalkanoates, as for Rhodocyclus-related PAO, and its identity is still unknown. Growth and uptake of Pi took place in the presence of oxygen and nitrate but not nitrite, indicating a lack of denitrifying ability. A survey of the occurrence of these actinobacterial PAO in 10 full-scale EBPR plants revealed that both morphotypes were widely present, and in several plants more abundant than the Rhodocyclus-related PAO, thus playing a very important role in the EBPR process.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2004

Microautoradiographic Study of Rhodocyclus-Related Polyphosphate- Accumulating Bacteria in Full-Scale Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal Plants

Yunhong Kong; Jeppe Lund Nielsen; Per Halkjær Nielsen

ABSTRACT The ecophysiology of uncultured Rhodocyclus-related polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAO) present in three full-scale enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) activated sludge plants was studied by using microautoradiography combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization. The investigations showed that these organisms were present in all plants examined and constituted 5 to 10, 10 to 15, and 17 to 22% of the community biomass. The behavior of these bacteria generally was consistent with the biochemical models proposed for PAO, based on studies of lab-scale investigations of enriched and often unknown PAO cultures. Rhodocyclus-related PAO were able to accumulate short-chain substrates, including acetate, propionate, and pyruvate, under anaerobic conditions, but they could not assimilate many other low-molecular-weight compounds, such as ethanol and butyrate. They were able to assimilate two substrates (e.g., acetate and propionate) simultaneously. Leucine and thymidine could not be assimilated as sole substrates and could only be assimilated as cosubstrates with acetate, perhaps serving as N sources. Glucose could not be assimilated by the Rhodocyclus-related PAO, but it was easily fermented in the sludge to products that were subsequently consumed. Glycolysis, and not the tricarboxylic acid cycle, was the source that provided the reducing power needed by the Rhodocyclus-related PAO to form the intracellular polyhydroxyalkanoate storage compounds during anaerobic substrate assimilation. The Rhodocyclus-related PAO were able to take up orthophosphate and accumulate polyphosphate when oxygen, nitrate, or nitrite was present as an electron acceptor. Furthermore, in the presence of acetate growth was sustained by using oxygen, as well as nitrate or nitrite, as an electron acceptor. This strongly indicates that Rhodocyclus-related PAO were able to denitrify and thus played a role in the denitrification occurring in full-scale EBPR plants.


Water Research | 2010

A conceptual ecosystem model of microbial communities in enhanced biological phosphorus removal plants

Per Halkjær Nielsen; Artur Tomasz Mielczarek; Caroline Kragelund; Jeppe Lund Nielsen; Aaron Marc Saunders; Yunhong Kong; Aviaja Anna Hansen; Jes Vollertsen

The microbial populations in 25 full-scale activated sludge wastewater treatment plants with enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR plants) have been intensively studied over several years. Most of the important bacterial groups involved in nitrification, denitrification, biological P removal, fermentation, and hydrolysis have been identified and quantified using quantitative culture-independent molecular methods. Surprisingly, a limited number of core species was present in all plants, constituting on average approx. 80% of the entire communities in the plants, showing that the microbial populations in EBPR plants are rather similar and not very diverse, as sometimes suggested. By focusing on these organisms it is possible to make a comprehensive ecosystem model, where many important aspects in relation to microbial ecosystems and wastewater treatment can be investigated. We have reviewed the current knowledge about these microorganisms with focus on key ecophysiological factors and combined this into a conceptual ecosystem model for EBPR plants. It includes the major pathways of carbon flow with specific organic substances, the dominant populations involved in the transformations, interspecies interactions, and the key factors controlling their presence and activity. We believe that the EBPR process is a perfect model system for studies of microbial ecology in water engineering systems and that this conceptual model can be used for proposing and testing theories based on microbial ecosystem theories, for the development of new and improved quantitative ecosystem models and is beneficial for future design and management of wastewater treatment systems.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2010

Composition, spatial distribution, and diversity of the bacterial communities in the rumen of cows fed different forages

Yunhong Kong; Ronald M. Teather; Robert J. Forster

The species composition, distribution, and biodiversity of the bacterial communities in the rumen of cows fed alfalfa or triticale were investigated using 16S rRNA gene clone library analyses. The rumen bacterial community was fractionated and analyzed as three separate fractions: populations in the planktonic, loosely attached to rumen digesta particles, and tightly attached to rumen digesta particles. Six hundred and thirteen operational taxonomic units (OTUs) belonging to 32 genera, 19 families, and nine phyla of the domain Bacteria were identified from 1014 sequenced clones. Four hundred and fifty one of the 613 OTUs were identified as new species. These bacterial sequences were distributed differently among the three fractions in the rumen digesta of cows fed alfalfa or triticale. Chao 1 estimation revealed that, in both communities, the populations tightly attached to particulates were more diverse than the planktonic and those loosely attached to particulates. S-Libshuff detected significant differences in the composition between any two fractions in the rumen of cows with the same diet and between the communities fed alfalfa and triticale diets. The species richness estimated for the communities fed alfalfa and triticale is 1027 and 662, respectively. The diversity of the rumen bacterial community examined in this study is greater than previous studies have demonstrated and the differences in the community composition between two high-fiber diets have implications for sample selection for downstream metagenomics applications.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Identification and ecophysiological characterization of epiphytic protein-hydrolyzing Saprospiraceae ( Candidatus epiflobacter spp.) in activated sludge

Yun Xia; Yunhong Kong; Trine Rolighed Thomsen; Per Halkjær Nielsen

ABSTRACT The identity and ecophysiology of a group of uncultured protein-hydrolyzing epiphytic rods attached to filamentous bacteria in activated sludge from nutrient removal plants were investigated by using the full-cycle rRNA approach combined with microautoradiography and histochemical staining. The epiphytic group consists of three closely related clusters, each containing 11 to 16 clones. The closest related cultured isolate is the type strain Haliscomenobacter hydrossis (ATCC 27775) (<87% similarity) in the family Saprospiraceae of the phylum Bacteroidetes. Oligonucleotide probes at different hierarchical levels were designed for each cluster and used for ecophysiological studies. All three clusters behaved similarly in their physiology and were specialized in protein hydrolysis and used amino acids as energy and carbon sources. They were not involved in denitrification. No storage of polyphosphate and polyhydroxyalkanoates was found. They all colonized probe-defined filamentous bacteria belonging to the phyla Chloroflexi, Proteobacteria, and candidate phylum TM7, with the exception of cluster 1, which did not colonize TM7 filaments. The three epiphytic clusters were all widespread in domestic and industrial wastewater treatment plants with or without biological phosphorus removal, constituting, in total, up to 9% of the bacterial biovolume. A new genus, “Candidatus Epiflobacter,” is proposed for this epiphytic group in activated-sludge treatment plants, where it presumably plays an important role in protein degradation.


Microbiology | 2008

Identity, abundance and ecophysiology of filamentous bacteria belonging to the Bacteroidetes present in activated sludge plants

Caroline Kragelund; Caterina Levantesi; Arjan Borger; Karin Thelen; Dick Eikelboom; Valter Tandoi; Yunhong Kong; Janneke Krooneman; Poul Larsen; Trine Rolighed Thomsen; Per Halkjær Nielsen

Filamentous members of the Bacteroidetes are commonly observed in activated sludge samples originating from both municipal and industrial wastewater treatment plants (WWTP), where they occasionally can cause bulking. Several oligonucleotide 16S rRNA-targeted probes were designed to target filaments with a needle-like appearance similar to Haliscomenobacter hydrossis. The design of these probes was based on an isolate and a sequence obtained from a micromanipulated filament. The abundance of filamentous Bacteroidetes was determined in 126 industrial samples applying already published and the newly developed probes. Small populations were found in 62 % of the WWTP investigated. However, only relatively few WWTP (13 %) contained large populations of filamentous Bacteroidetes potentially responsible for bulking incidences. The identity of the most abundant filamentous Bacteroidetes with H. hydrossis morphology could be detected by probes CFB719, SAP-309 and the newly designed probe HHY-654. A comprehensive study on the ecophysiology of probe-defined Bacteroidetes populations was conducted on Danish and Czech samples. The studies revealed that they were specialized bacteria involved in degradation of sugars, e.g. glucose and N-acetylglucosamine, and may participate in the conversion of lipopolysaccharides and peptidoglycan liberated by decaying cells. Many surface-associated exo-enzymes were excreted, e.g. chitinase, glucuronidase, esterase and phosphatase, supporting conversion of polysaccharides and possibly other released cell components. The role of filamentous bacteria with a H. hydrossis-like morphology in the activated sludge ecosystem is discussed.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Quantitative Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization of Microbial Communities in the Rumens of Cattle Fed Different Diets

Yunhong Kong; M. L. He; Tim McAlister; Robert J. Seviour; Robert J. Forster

ABSTRACT At present there is little quantitative information on the identity and composition of bacterial populations in the rumen microbial community. Quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization using newly designed oligonucleotide probes was applied to identify the microbial populations in liquid and solid fractions of rumen digesta from cows fed barley silage or grass hay diets with or without flaxseed. Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria were abundant in both fractions, constituting 31.8 to 87.3% of the total cell numbers. They belong mainly to the order Bacteroidales (0.1 to 19.2%), hybridizing with probe BAC1080; the families Lachnospiraceae (9.3 to 25.5%) and Ruminococcaceae (5.5 to 23.8%), hybridizing with LAC435 and RUM831, respectively; and the classes Deltaproteobacteria (5.8 to 28.3%) and Gammaproteobacteria (1.2 to 8.2%). All were more abundant in the rumen communities of cows fed diets containing silage (75.2 to 87.3%) than in those of cows fed diets containing hay (31.8 to 49.5%). The addition of flaxseed reduced their abundance in the rumens of cows fed silage-based diets (to 45.2 to 58.7%) but did not change markedly their abundance in the rumens of cows fed hay-based diets (31.8 to 49.5%). Fibrolytic species, including Fibrobacter succinogenes and Ruminococcus spp., and archaeal methanogens accounted for only a small proportion (0.4 to 2.1% and 0.2 to 0.6%, respectively) of total cell numbers. Depending on diet, between 37.0 and 91.6% of microbial cells specifically hybridized with the probes used in this study, allowing them to be identified in situ. The identities of other microbial populations (8.4 to 63.0%) remain unknown.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2008

Ecophysiology of the Actinobacteria in activated sludge systems

Robert J. Seviour; Caroline Kragelund; Yunhong Kong; Katherine Eales; Jeppe Lund Nielsen; Per Halkjær Nielsen

This review considers what is known about the Actinobacteria in activated sludge systems, their abundance and their functional roles there. Participation in processes leading to the microbiological removal of phosphate and in the operational problems of bulking and foaming are discussed in terms of their ecophysiological traits. We consider critically whether elucidation of their nutritional requirements and other physiological properties allow us to understand better what might affect their survival capabilities in these highly competitive systems. Furthermore, how this information might allow us to improve how these processes work is discussed.


Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Activity and identity of fermenting microorganisms in full‐scale biological nutrient removing wastewater treatment plants

Yunhong Kong; Yun Xia; Per Halkjær Nielsen

Hydrolysis and fermentation are of key importance in biological nutrient removal (BNR) wastewater treatment plants as they provide polyphosphate-accumulating organisms and denitrifying bacteria with carbon and energy sources (e.g. short chain fatty acids). Little information, however, exists about the microbiology of the microorganisms involved in hydrolysis and fermentation. In this study, fermentation of monosaccharides was found to be a universal process taking place in all full-scale BNR plants investigated, where glucose and other monosaccharides were consumed and fermented during anaerobic conditions. The removal rates of glucose were in the range of 0.05-0.32 mmol gVSS(-1) h(-1) and only slightly lower than glucose removal under aerobic conditions. The main fermentation products detected were (in descending order) propionic acid, lactic acid, acetic acid and formic acid. The fermentation was diverse, consisting of at least three fermentation metabolisms, including lactic acid (homolactic), mixed acid and propionic acid fermentations. Possible existence of alcohol and/or butyric acid fermentations could not be excluded. Fermentation organisms in Aalborg East treatment plant were identified by using microautoradiography combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization. All microorganisms involved in monosaccharide fermentation belonged to either Gram-positive Firmicutes or Actinobacteria. Most of them were related either to Streptococcus, hybridizing to the oligonucleotide probe Str, or to uncultured Actinobacteria with a phenotype of polyphosphate-accumulating organisms. The fermenting bacteria were widespread in the nine full-scale BNR plants investigated and constituted 3-21% of the total bacterial biovolume.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2008

In situ detection of starch-hydrolyzing microorganisms in activated sludge

Yun Xia; Yunhong Kong; Per Halkjær Nielsen

Polysaccharides constitute a significant part of the organic matter in domestic wastewater and their hydrolysis plays an important role in their transformation and nutrient removal in activated sludge wastewater treatment plants. However, there is no information available about the identity, ecophysiology, and abundance of starch-hydrolyzing organisms (SHOs) in these plants. In this study, fluorescence in situ enzyme staining with BODIPY fluorescein-labeled starch was applied and optimized to label SHOs expressing alpha-amylase in activated sludge plants. Fluorescence on the surface of bacteria expressing alpha-amylase activity was clearly visualized. In 11 full-scale nutrient-removing wastewater treatment plants examined, the morphotypes of the dominant SHOs were always cocci in clusters of tetrads, short rods in clusters, and some filamentous organisms. The SHOs were identified by combining in situ enzyme staining and FISH using a range of available oligonucleotide probes. All the SHOs observed were Actinobacteria, and most had the phenotype of polyphosphate-accumulating organisms closely related to the genus Tetrasphaera in the family Intrasporangiaceae. The SHOs were present in most of the wastewater treatment plants examined and comprised, in total, up to 11% of bacterial biovolume and thus formed an important part of the microbial communities.

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Robert J. Forster

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Valter Tandoi

National Research Council

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Tim A. McAllister

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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