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A combination cyanobacterial treatment approach using hydrogen peroxide and L-lysine successfully improved the removal efficiency of toxic cyanobacteria
Journal article   Peer reviewed

A combination cyanobacterial treatment approach using hydrogen peroxide and L-lysine successfully improved the removal efficiency of toxic cyanobacteria

Elizabeth K. Dahedl, Taylor L. Hancock, Michael A. Kratz and Hidetoshi Urakawa
Journal of environmental management, Vol.373, 123503
01-2025
PMID: 39672044
Appears in  United Nations Sustainable Development Goals @ FGCU

Abstract

cyanobacteria Exiguobacterium Hydrogen peroxide L-lysine Metatranscriptomics Microcystis
Harmful cyanobacterial blooms have been increasing globally, introducing new challenges for protecting aquatic ecosystems and human health. A combined algaecide treatment, similar to combination antibiotic therapy, may more rapidly and effectively remove cyanobacteria by broad targeting of different growth mechanisms, reducing the recovery of bloom-forming cyanobacteria. To confirm this hypothesis, hydrogen peroxide (10.5 mg/L), L-lysine (8.2 mg/L), and mixed treatment (hydrogen peroxide: 8.4 mg/L; L-lysine: 6.7 mg/L) of both chemicals were examined for cyanobacterial removal in a 7-day mesocosm study. We found that both hydrogen peroxide and L-lysine effectively reduced cyanobacterial abundance to less than 1% at the end of the experiment. Mixed mesocosm phytoplankton communities responded similarly to hydrogen peroxide treatment throughout the sampling period. Microcystis abundance sharply dropped within 24 h (94% reduction) and Microcystis was no longer detected by day 7. Of the three treatments, the mixed treatment had the greatest impact on Microcystis abundance and gene expression. In lysine mesocosms, cyanobacteria were replaced by Chlorophyta, whereas the hydrogen peroxide and mixed treatments led to a shift toward the eustigmatophyte Nannochloropsis. Transcriptomics revealed that heterotrophic bacteria such as Exiguobacterium, which was resilient to hydrogen peroxide and mixed treatments, benefited from increased catalase expression, which helped mitigate oxidative stress and allowed them to dominate in bacterial succession. Lysine toxicity on microbial communities and taxa sensitivity likely stemmed from amino acid homeostasis disruptions as well as abnormal lysine riboswitch and degradation activity. Overall, a combination cyanobacterial treatment approach using hydrogen peroxide and L-lysine successfully improved the removal efficiency of toxic cyanobacteria. [Display omitted] •First algal treatment study of mixed application of hydrogen peroxide and L-lysine.•First metatranscriptomic study of the impacts of L-lysine on microbial communities.•L-lysine led to the succession from cyanobacteria to Chlorophyta.•Hydrogen peroxide and mixed treatments led to the dominance of Nannochloropsis.•Exiguobacterium exhibited strong resiliency to hydrogen peroxide application.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#14 Life Below Water
#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#13 Climate Action
#15 Life on Land
#6 Clean Water and Sanitation

Source: SDGs in the Output

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