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DNA microarray detection of nitrifying bacterial 16S rRNA in wastewater treatment plant samples
Journal article   Peer reviewed

DNA microarray detection of nitrifying bacterial 16S rRNA in wastewater treatment plant samples

John J. Kelly, Slil Siripong, John McCormack, Lori R. Janus, Hidetoshi Urakawa, Said El Fantroussi, Peter A. Noble, Laura Sappelsa, Bruce E. Rittmann and David A. Stahl
Water research (Oxford), Vol.39(14), pp.3229-3238
2005
PMID: 16009395

Abstract

Microarray Nitrification Nitrifiers Wastewater treatment
A small scale DNA microarray containing a set of oligonucleotide probes targeting the 16S rRNAs of several groups of nitrifying bacteria was developed for the monitoring of wastewater treatment plant samples. The microarray was tested using reference rRNAs from pure cultures of nitrifying bacteria. Characterization of samples collected from an industrial wastewater treatment facility demonstrated that nitrifying bacteria could be detected directly by microarray hybridization without the need for PCR amplification. Specifically, the microarray detected Nitrosomonas spp. but did not detect Nitrobacter. The specificity and sensitivity of direct detection was evaluated using on-chip dissociation analysis, and by two independent analyses—an established membrane hybridization format and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism fingerprinting (T-RFLP). The latter two analyses also revealed Nitrospira and Nitrobacter to be contributing populations in the treatment plant samples. The application of DNA microarrays to wastewater treatment systems, which has been demonstrated in the current work, should offer improved monitoring capabilities and process control for treatment systems, which are susceptible to periodic failures.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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

#6 Clean Water and Sanitation

Source: SDGs in the Output

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