“…Effluents from municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are an important source of dissolved organic sulfur (DOS) entering water bodies. Wastewater-derived DOS originates from the sulfidation process of natural organic matter and anthropogenic release of sulfur-containing chemicals (e.g., micropollutants of detergents, surfactants, and drugs) and from microbial metabolism in biological treatment processes in WWTPs (e.g., microbial products of sulfur-containing amino acids and peptides). − DOS in wastewater, which has a potential endocrine disruption effect and exceptionally strong binding affinity with mercury, may reduce water quality in receiving waters. − Additionally, as a major component of dissolved organic matter, DOS presents a special property of forming mercury–DOS complexes, differentiating from other components in dissolved organic matter (e.g., dissolved organic carbon or dissolved organic nitrogen). , The mercury–DOS complexes alter the mobility and bioavailability of mercury and promote the production of neurotoxic methylmercury. , As a consequence of environmental risks posed by DOS, two consecutive publications in the journal Science highlighted that DOS is critical for ecological security in aquatic ecosystems. , The oxic process in municipal WWTPs is the critical contributor for the degradation and removal of various organic matter, which are biologically utilized or decomposed via microbial biochemical reactions in the presence of oxygen. , Microbes in the oxic process are deemed responsible for the changes in dissolved organic matter, including dissolved organic carbon, dissolved organic nitrogen, dissolved organic phosphorus, and DOS. ,, So far, transformation characteristics of carbon, nitrogen, or phosphorus parts in dissolved organic matter have been documented. However, the transformation of DOS and the microbial mechanisms during the oxic process remain poorly understood.…”