REVIEW: Microbial Selection of Polyphosphate-Accumulating Bacteria in
Activated Sludge Wastewater Treatment Processes for Enhanced Biological
Phosphate Removal
T. Mino
Department of Environmental Studies, The University of Tokyo 7-3-1,
Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8656; fax: +81-3-5841-8531; E-mail:
mino@k.u-tokyo.ac.jp
Received December 7, 1999
Activated sludge processes with alternating anaerobic and aerobic
conditions (the anaerobic-aerobic process) have been successfully used
for enhanced biological phosphate removal (EBPR) from wastewater. It is
known that polyphosphate-accumulating bacteria (PAB) play an essential
role for EBPR in the anaerobic-aerobic process. The present paper
reviews limited information available on the metabolism and the
microbial community structure of EBPR, highlighting the microbial
ecological selection of PAB in EBPR processes. Exposure of
microorganisms to alternate carbon-rich anaerobic environments and
carbon-poor aerobic environments in the anaerobic-aerobic process
induces the key metabolic characteristics of PAB, which include organic
substrate uptake followed by its conversion to stored
polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) and hydrolysis of intracellular
polyphosphate accompanied by subsequent Pi release under
anaerobic conditions. Intracellular glycogen is assumed to function as
a regulator of the redox balance in the cell. Storage of glycogen is a
key strategy for PAB to maintain the redox balance in the anaerobic
uptake of various organic substrates, and hence to win in the microbial
selection. Acinetobacter spp., Microlunatus phosphovorus,
Lampropedia spp., and the Rhodocyclus group have been
reported as candidates of PAB. PAB may not be composed of a few limited
genospecies, but involve phylogenetically and taxonomically diverse
groups of bacteria. To define microbial community structure of EBPR
processes, it is needed to look more closely into the occurrence and
behavior of each species of PAB in various EBPR processes mainly by
molecular methods because many of PAB seem to be impossible to culture.
KEY WORDS: Acinetobacter, activated sludge,
anaerobic-aerobic process, ecological selection, enhanced biological
phosphate removal (EBPR), glycogen, Lampropedia, microbial
community, Microlunatus phosphovorus, polyhydroxyalkanoates
(PHAs), polyphosphate-accumulating bacteria, Rhodocyclus,
wastewater treatment