Microalgae-based approaches serve as promising methods for the remediation of pharmaceutical contaminants (PCs) compared to conventional wastewater treatment processes. However, how to decrease hydraulic retention times of the microalgal system currently has been one of the main bottlenecks. This study constructed an unexpected synergistic extra-chemical/intra-biological degradation system by adding 5.95 mM bicarbonate to the microalgal system, which achieved complete removal (100%) of a representative PC, doxylamine (DOX) in 96 h, compared to that 192 h in the control. Removal capacities and mass balance analyses demonstrated that biodegradation rate per unit microalgal density was significantly increased by 207%. Further analyses using transcriptomic, enzymatic inhibiting tests, and high-resolution mass spectrometry revealed that after addition of bicarbonate for metabolism of DOX, a hydrolase (CYP97C1) and a primary amine oxidase (TynA) can transform DOX into doxylamine N-oxide and an intermediate (C15H17NO2) with a m/z of 244.1335. Meanwhile, bicarbonate reacted with microalgae-excreted hydrogen peroxide to form more oxidative radicals such as superoxide and hydroxyl radicals extracellularly, which promised the extracellular degradation of DOX according to the oxidative radical inhibiting tests. Further investigation showed addiing bicarbonate to the microalgal system improved the removal rate of 17 PCs by up to 500.8%. Therefore, this study not only developed an approach to enhance treatment efficiencies of diverse PCs by microalgae within a shorter time, but also carried unique mechanistic insights into the underlying principles.
Keywords: Bicarbonate; Doxylamine; Intra-/extra-cellular degradation mechanism; Microalgae-based biotechnologies; Pharmaceutical contaminants; Wastewater treatment.
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