Cocontamination by multiple chlorinated solvents is a
prevalent
issue in groundwater, presenting a formidable challenge for effective
remediation. Despite the recognition of this issue, a comprehensive
assessment of microbial detoxification processes involving chloroethenes
and associated cocontaminants, along with the underpinning microbiome,
remains absent. Moreover, strategies to mitigate the inhibitory effects
of cocontaminants have not been reported. Here, we revealed that chloroform
exhibited the most potent inhibitory effects, followed by 1,1,1-trichloroethane
and 1,1,2-trichloroethane, on dechlorination of dichloroethenes (DCEs)
in Dehalococcoides-containing consortia. The observed
inhibition could be attributed to suppression of biosynthesis and
enzymatic activity of reductive dehalogenases and growth of Dehalococcoides. Notably, cocontaminants more profoundly
inhibited Dehalococcoides populations harboring the vcrA gene than those possessing the tceA gene, thereby explaining the accumulation of vinyl chloride under
cocontaminant stress. Nonetheless, we successfully ameliorated cocontaminant
inhibition by augmentation with Desulfitobacterium sp. strain PR owing to its ability to attenuate cocontaminants,
resulting in concurrent detoxification of DCEs, trichloroethanes,
and chloroform. Microbial community analyses demonstrated obvious
alterations in taxonomic composition, structure, and assembly of the
dechlorinating microbiome in the presence of cocontaminants, and introduction
of strain PR reshaped the dechlorinating microbiome to be similar
to its original state in the absence of cocontaminants. Altogether,
these findings contribute to developing bioremediation technologies
to clean up challenging sites polluted with multiple chlorinated solvents.