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Impact of human activities on groundwater biogeochemical cycles and microbial communities: Insights from metagenomic analysis

  • Zhengxing Chen
  • , Xiufeng Tang
  • , Yirui Su
  • , Tao Liu
  • , Uli Klümper
  • , Feng Ju
  • , Min Liu*
  • , Ping Han
  • *此作品的通讯作者
  • East China Normal University
  • Nanjing Agricultural University
  • Hong Kong Polytechnic University
  • Technische Universität Dresden
  • Westlake University
  • City University of Hong Kong

科研成果: 期刊稿件文章同行评审

摘要

Anthropogenic nitrogen pollution poses a systemic threat to microbial interaction networks and biogeochemical cycling in groundwater ecosystems, yet the underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. Employing an endpoint gradient comparison, we conducted metagenomic analyses of urban groundwater under severe nitrogen stress (Shanghai, China; with NH4+ and NO3 concentrations ∼28× and ∼10× background levels, respectively) versus a near-pristine mountain aquifer (Calistoga, USA). This revealed a multi-level collapse and adaptive restructuring of microbial communities under nitrogen stress. Pollution triggered a fundamental restructuring of bacterial communities, with system type (urban vs. mountain) explaining 74 % of the compositional variation, accompanied by a significant reduction in bacterial alpha-diversity (Shannon index decreased by 34 %) and a taxonomic shift from Actinomycetota-dominated mutualistic networks in the mountain system to Pseudomonadota-dominated communities (> 0.86 relative abundance) in urban groundwater. Functionally, urban systems exhibited multi-pathway suppression of energy-intensive processes, including nitrification (e.g., hao, nxrB genes), methanogenesis, and inorganic sulfur oxidation, aligning with the theory of "pollution-induced metabolic decoupling." To survive, the microbial community pivoted to low-energy strategies, significantly enriching genes for organic sulfur metabolism (e.g., dddT, tsdB), which may exacerbate nitrogen retention by inhibiting denitrifiers via metabolites like H2S. Co-occurrence network topology analysis indicated a catastrophic loss of complexity in urban groundwater, with a ∼90 % reduction in connectivity and a collapse in modularity (from 19.94 to 3.33), alongside an abnormally high proportion of positive correlations (94.4 %), signaling a major loss of ecosystem stability and functional redundancy. Random Forest and redundancy analyses jointly identified ammonium (NH4+) as the core environmental driver of this cascading failure, explaining 86 % of the variance in functional gene profiles and likely disrupting the nitrification pathway through specific suppression of the rate-limiting hao gene (which explained 76 % of the variance in nitrification rates). Based on these insights, we propose a dual-track restoration framework that couples external NH4+ source control with internal microbial network rewiring (e.g., restoring keystone taxa, regulating sulfur feedback loops) to break the nitrogen-sulfur inhibition cycle and restore ecological function. Our findings underscore the critical importance of integrating microbial network resilience into strategies for managing and rehabilitating contaminated groundwater ecosystems.

源语言英语
文章编号125493
期刊Water Research
294
DOI
出版状态已出版 - 15 4月 2026

联合国可持续发展目标

此成果有助于实现下列可持续发展目标:

  1. 可持续发展目标 11 - 可持续城市和社区
    可持续发展目标 11 可持续城市和社区

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