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Authors Adler

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Adler, Aline


Publications
2

CitationNamesAbstract
Comparative transcription profiles of Candidatus Accumulibacter and Propionivibrio under phosphate limitation in sequencing batch reactors Cardona et al. (2025). Frontiers in Microbiology 16 “Accumulibacter”
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Disentangle genus microdiversity within a complex microbial community by using a multi‐distance long‐read binning method: example of Candidatus Accumulibacter Adler et al. (2022). Environmental Microbiology 24 (4) “Accumulibacter”
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Comparative transcription profiles of Candidatus Accumulibacter and Propionivibrio under phosphate limitation in sequencing batch reactors
Polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) play a crucial role in enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) processes. In addition to biosynthesis, they rely on phosphate for energy generation. However, Candidatus Accumulibacter, a model PAO, has been shown to adapt to low phosphate conditions by switching to a glycogen-accumulating metabolism (GAM), with variable success across genus members and experiments. This study aimed to explore the metabolic shift of several Accumulibacter species subjected to low-phosphate concentration in different operating conditions using metatranscriptomics analysis. Furthermore, the study enabled a comparison of the transcriptomic profiles of Accumulibacter with those of Propionivibrio , a glycogen-accumulating organism typically found in EBPR plants. Two sequencing batch reactors were operated with different carbon sources to enrich for different populations of Accumulibacter . After decreasing the influent phosphate concentration, carbon removal performance was maintained while anaerobic phosphate release dropped dramatically, suggesting a shift from a phosphate-accumulating to a glycogen-accumulating metabolism. Analysis of metatranscriptomics data indicated that Accumulibacter regalis (type I) and Propionivibrio aalborgensis remained the most abundant species after the phosphate decrease in the reactor with acetate-propionate and allylthiourea, while Accumulibacter delftensis (type I) and Accumulibacter phosphatis (type II) remained active in the reactor with acetate-glucose and no allylthiourea. Transcription of the genes from the ethylmalonyl-CoA pathway involved in the production of propionyl-CoA and regulation of the anaerobic redox balance was enhanced under low-phosphate conditions, especially for type I Accumulibacter . Conversely, the transcription of the methylmalonyl-CoA pathway was enhanced under low-phosphate conditions in Propionivibrio and type II Accumulibacter .
Disentangle genus microdiversity within a complex microbial community by using a multi‐distance long‐read binning method: example of Candidatus Accumulibacter
Summary Complete genomes can be recovered from metagenomes by assembling and binning DNA sequences into metagenome assembled genomes (MAGs). Yet, the presence of microdiversity can hamper the assembly and binning processes, possibly yielding chimeric, highly fragmented and incomplete genomes. Here, the metagenomes of four samples of aerobic granular sludge bioreactors containing Candidatus ( Ca .) Accumulibacter, a phosphate‐accumulating organism of interest for wastewater treatment, were sequenced with both PacBio and Illumina. Different strategies of genome assembly and binning were investigated, including published protocols and a binning procedure adapted to the binning of long contigs (MuLoBiSC). Multiple criteria were considered to select the best strategy for Ca . Accumulibacter, whose multiple strains in every sample represent a challenging microdiversity. In this case, the best strategy relies on long‐read only assembly and a custom binning procedure including MuLoBiSC in metaWRAP. Several high‐quality Ca . Accumulibacter MAGs, including a novel species, were obtained independently from different samples. Comparative genomic analysis showed that MAGs retrieved in different samples harbour genomic rearrangements in addition to accumulation of point mutations. The microdiversity of Ca . Accumulibacter, likely driven by mobile genetic elements, causes major difficulties in recovering MAGs, but it is also a hallmark of the panmictic lifestyle of these bacteria.
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