首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 140 毫秒
1.
A denitrifying microbial consortium was enriched in an anoxically operated, methanol-fed sequencing batch reactor (SBR) fed with a mineral salts medium containing methanol as the sole carbon source and nitrate as the electron acceptor. The SBR was inoculated with sludge from a biological nutrient removal activated sludge plant exhibiting good denitrification. The SBR denitrification rate improved from less than 0.02 mg of NO(3)(-)-N mg of mixed-liquor volatile suspended solids (MLVSS)(-1) h(-1) to a steady-state value of 0.06 mg of NO(3)(-)-N mg of MLVSS(-1) h(-1) over a 7-month operational period. At this time, the enriched microbial community was subjected to stable-isotope probing (SIP) with [(13)C]methanol to biomark the DNA of the denitrifiers. The extracted [(13)C]DNA and [(12)C]DNA from the SIP experiment were separately subjected to full-cycle rRNA analysis. The dominant 16S rRNA gene phylotype (group A clones) in the [(13)C]DNA clone library was closely related to those of the obligate methylotrophs Methylobacillus and Methylophilus in the order Methylophilales of the Betaproteobacteria (96 to 97% sequence identities), while the most abundant clone groups in the [(12)C]DNA clone library mostly belonged to the family Saprospiraceae in the Bacteroidetes phylum. Oligonucleotide probes for use in fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) were designed to specifically target the group A clones and Methylophilales (probes DEN67 and MET1216, respectively) and the Saprospiraceae clones (probe SAP553). Application of these probes to the SBR biomass over the enrichment period demonstrated a strong correlation between the level of SBR denitrification and relative abundance of DEN67-targeted bacteria in the SBR community. By contrast, there was no correlation between the denitrification rate and the relative abundances of the well-known denitrifying genera Hyphomicrobium and Paracoccus or the Saprospiraceae clones visualized by FISH in the SBR biomass. FISH combined with microautoradiography independently confirmed that the DEN67-targeted cells were the dominant bacterial group capable of anoxic [(14)C]methanol uptake in the enriched biomass. The well-known denitrification lag period in the methanol-fed SBR was shown to coincide with a lag phase in growth of the DEN67-targeted denitrifying population. We conclude that Methylophilales bacteria are the dominant denitrifiers in our SBR system and likely are important denitrifiers in full-scale methanol-fed denitrifying sludges.  相似文献   

2.
The acetate-utilizing microbial consortium in a full-scale activated sludge process was investigated without prior enrichment using stable isotope probing (SIP). [13C]acetate was used in SIP to label the DNA of the denitrifiers. The [13C]DNA fraction that was extracted was subjected to a full-cycle rRNA analysis. The dominant 16S rRNA gene phylotypes in the 13C library were closely related to the bacterial families Comamonadaceae and Rhodocyclaceae in the class Betaproteobacteria. Seven oligonucleotide probes for use in fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) were designed to specifically target these clones. Application of these probes to the sludge of a continuously fed denitrifying sequencing batch reactor (CFDSBR) operated for 16 days revealed that there was a significant positive correlation between the CFDSBR denitrification rate and the relative abundance of all probe-targeted bacteria in the CFDSBR community. FISH-microautoradiography demonstrated that the DEN581 and DEN124 probe-targeted cells that dominated the CFDSBR were capable of taking up [14C]acetate under anoxic conditions. Initially, DEN444 and DEN1454 probe-targeted bacteria also dominated the CFDSBR biomass, but eventually DEN581 and DEN124 probe-targeted bacteria were the dominant bacterial groups. All probe-targeted bacteria assessed in this study were denitrifiers capable of utilizing acetate as a source of carbon. The rapid increase in the number of organisms positively correlated with the immediate increase in denitrification rates observed by plant operators when acetate is used as an external source of carbon to enhance denitrification. We suggest that the impact of bacteria on activated sludge subjected to intermittent acetate supplementation should be assessed prior to the widespread use of acetate in the wastewater industry to enhance denitrification.  相似文献   

3.
The distribution and phylogenetic affiliations of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate) (PHBV)-degrading denitrifying bacteria in activated sludge were studied by a polyphasic approach including culture-independent biomarker and molecular analyses as well as cultivation methods. A total of 23 strains of PHBV-degrading denitrifiers were isolated from activated sludges from different sewage treatment plants. 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequence comparisons showed that 20 of the isolates were identified as members of the family Comamonadaceae, a major group of β-Proteobacteria. When the sludges from different plants were acclimated with PHBV under denitrifying conditions in laboratory scale reactors, the nitrate removal rate increased linearly during the first 4 weeks and reached 20 mg NO3-N h−1 g of dry sludge−1 at the steady state. The bacterial-community change in the laboratory scale sludges during the acclimation was monitored by rRNA-targeted fluorescence in situ hybridization and quinone profiling. Both approaches showed that the population of β-Proteobacteria in the laboratory sludges increased sharply during acclimation regardless of their origins. 16S rDNA clone libraries were constructed from two different acclimated sludges, and a total of 37 clones from the libraries were phylogenetically analyzed. Most of the 16S rDNA clones were grouped with members of the family Comamonadaceae. The results of our polyphasic approach indicate that β-Proteobacteria, especially members of the family Comamonadaceae, are primary PHBV-degrading denitrifiers in activated sludge. Our data provide useful information for the development of a new nitrogen removal system with solid biopolymer as an electron donor.  相似文献   

4.
AIMS: This study proposes the application of a culture-independent method [fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)] and a bioreactor operation control strategy to characterize environmental micro-organisms according to their survival strategies in a mixed suspension culture. Eco-physiological characteristics of two 16S rRNA probe-targeted denitrifiers (DEN581 and DEN124) were investigated against the availability of two resources. METHODS AND RESULTS: Four sequencing batch reactors were operated with manipulation of the sludge retention times to enforce limited and excess availability of two nutrients, namely acetate and nitrite, to the biomass. DEN581 FISH probe-targeted denitrifiers demonstrated dominance when the ratio of either acetate or nitrite to biomass was in excess, while DEN124-targeted organisms dominated when the above were limited. CONCLUSIONS: The study demonstrated that microbial populations in mixed cultures can be selected by changing the substrate availability (Rs) to biomass (X) ratio. The manipulation of the specific resource availability (Rs/X) determined which one of the studied probe-targeted denitrifiers (DEN124 or DEN581) became dominant. Rs/X provides a basis to study the physiology of micro-organisms that cannot be isolated in pure culture from activated sludge. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The eco-physiological characterization of micro-organisms responsible for biological nutrient removal is anticipated to assist process designers and operators to optimize a specific biological process, such as denitrification.  相似文献   

5.
Diel and seasonal variations in denitrification were determined in a littoral lake sediment colonized by the perennial macrophyte Littorella uniflora (L.) Aschers. In the winter, the activity was low (5 μmol of N m−2 h−1) and was restricted to the uppermost debris layer at a depth of 0 to 1 cm. By midsummer, the activity increased to 50 μmol of N m−2 h−1 and was found throughout the root zone to a depth of 10 cm. The root zone accounted for as much as 50 to 70% of the annual denitrification. A significant release of organic substrates from the roots seemed to determine the high activities of root zone denitrification in the summer. The denitrification in the surface layer and in the root zone formed two distinct activity zones in the summer, when the root zone also contained nitrification activity, as indicated from the accumulations of NO3. Light conditions inhibited denitrification in both the surface layer and the upper part of the root zone, suggesting that a release of O2 by benthic algae and from the roots of L. uniflora controlled a diel variation of denitrification. In midsummer, the rate of denitrification in both the surface layer and the upper part of the root zone was limited by NO3. In the growth season, there was evidence for a significant population of denitrifiers closely associated with the root surface.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Denitrification is essential to the removal of nitrogen from wastewater during treatment, yet an understanding of the diversity of the active denitrifying bacteria responsible in full‐scale wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) is lacking. In this study, stable‐isotope probing (SIP) was applied in combination with microautoradiography (MAR)‐fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to identify previously unrecognized active denitrifying phylotypes in a full‐scale WWTP with biological N and P removal. Acknowledging that different denitrifiers will have specific carbon source preferences, a fully 13C‐labelled complex substrate was used for SIP incubations, under nitrite‐reducing conditions, in order to maximize the capture of the potentially metabolically diverse denitrifiers likely present. Members of the Rhodoferax, Dechloromonas, Sulfuritalea, Haliangium and Thermomonas were represented in the 16S rRNA gene clone libraries from DNA enriched in 13C, with FISH probes optimized here for their in situ characterization. FISH and MAR confirmed that they were all active denitrifiers in the community. The combined approach of SIP and MAR‐FISH represents an excellent approach for identifying and characterizing an un‐described diversity of active denitrifiers in full‐scale systems.  相似文献   

8.
Most studies of bacterial denitrification have used nitrate (NO3) as the first electron acceptor, whereas relatively less is understood about nitrite (NO2) denitrification. We isolated novel bacteria that proliferated in the presence of high levels of NO2 (72 mM). Strain YD50.2, among several isolates, was taxonomically positioned within the α subclass of Proteobacteria and identified as Ochrobactrum anthropi YD50.2. This strain denitrified NO2, as well as NO3. The gene clusters for denitrification (nar, nir, nor, and nos) were cloned from O. anthropi YD50.2, in which the nir and nor operons were linked. We confirmed that nirK in the nir-nor operon produced a functional NO2 reductase containing copper that was involved in bacterial NO2 reduction. The strain denitrified up to 40 mM NO2 to dinitrogen under anaerobic conditions in which other denitrifiers or NO3 reducers such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Ralstonia eutropha and nitrate-respiring Escherichia coli neither proliferated nor reduced NO2. Under nondenitrifying aerobic conditions, O. anthropi YD50.2 and its type strain ATCC 49188T proliferated even in the presence of higher levels of NO2 (100 mM), and both were considerably more resistant to acidic NO2 than were the other strains noted above. These results indicated that O. anthropi YD50.2 is a novel denitrifier that has evolved reactive nitrogen oxide tolerance mechanisms.Environmental bacteria maintain the global nitrogen cycle by metabolizing organic and inorganic nitrogen compounds. Denitrification is critical for maintenance of the global nitrogen cycle, through which nitrate (NO3) or nitrite (NO2) is reduced to gaseous nitrogen forms such as N2 and nitrous oxide (N2O) (19, 47). Decades of investigations into denitrifying bacteria have revealed their ecological impact (9), their molecular mechanisms of denitrification (13, 25, 47), and the industrial importance of removing nitrogenous contaminants from wastewater (31, 36). Bacterial denitrification is considered to comprise four successive reduction steps, each of which is catalyzed by NO3 reductase (Nar), NO2 reductase (Nir), nitric oxide (NO) reductase (Nor), and N2O reductase (Nos). The reaction of each enzyme is linked to the electron transport chain on the cellular membrane and accompanies oxidative phosphorylation, implying that bacterial denitrification is of as much physiological significance as anaerobic respiration (25, 47). Most denitrifying bacteria are facultative anaerobes and respire with oxygen under aerobic conditions. Because denitrification is induced in the absence of oxygen, it is considered an alternative mechanism of energy conservation that has evolved as an adaptation to anaerobic circumstances (13, 47).Nitrite and NO are hazardous to bacteria, since they generate highly reactive nitrogen species (RNS) under physiological conditions and damage cellular DNA, lipid, and proteins (28, 37). Denitrifying bacteria are thought to be threatened by RNS since they reduce NO3 to generate NO2 and NO as denitrifying intermediates. Furthermore, denitrifying bacteria often inhabit environments where they are exposed to NO2 and NO and hence high levels of RNS. Recent reports suggest that pathogenic bacteria invading animal tissues are attacked by NO generated by macrophages (12). Such bacteria involve denitrifiers, and some of them, for example, Neisseria meningitidis (1) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, acquire resistance to NO by producing Nor (44). The utilization (reduction) of NO by Brucella increases the survival of infected mice (2). These examples suggest that production of a denitrifying mechanism affects bacterial survival of threats from both endogenous and extracellular RNS. However, the mechanism of RNS tolerance induced by denitrifying bacteria is not fully understood.Ubiquitous gram-negative Ochrobactrum strains are widely distributed in soils and aqueous environments, where they biodegrade aromatic compounds (11), organophosphorus pesticides (45), and other hydrocarbons (38) and remove heavy metal ions such as chromium and cadmium (24). Having been isolated from clinical specimens, Ochrobactrum anthropi is currently recognized as an emerging opportunistic pathogen, although relatively little is known about its pathogenesis and factors contributing to its virulence (7, 30). Manipulation systems have been developed to investigate these issues at the molecular genetic level (33). Some O. anthropi strains have been identified as denitrifiers (21), although the denitrifying properties of these strains have not been investigated in detail. This study was undertaken to examine the denitrifying properties of O. anthropi in more detail. O. anthropi YD50.2 was selected for this study and was isolated herein. The strain denitrified high levels of NO2 (up to 40 mM) to dinitrogen under anaerobic conditions. The strain was highly resistant to acidified NO2 under nondenitrifying aerobic conditions. These results indicate that O. anthropi YD50.2 has mechanisms that produce tolerance to RNS.  相似文献   

9.
Using a combination of process rate determination, microsensor profiling and molecular techniques, we demonstrated that denitrification, and not anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), is the major nitrogen loss process in biological soil crusts from Oman. Potential denitrification rates were 584±101 and 58±20 μmol N m−2 h−1 for cyanobacterial and lichen crust, respectively. Complete denitrification to N2 was further confirmed by an 15NO3 tracer experiment with intact crust pieces that proceeded at rates of 103±19 and 27±8 μmol N m−2 h−1 for cyanobacterial and lichen crust, respectively. Strikingly, N2O gas was emitted at very high potential rates of 387±143 and 31±6 μmol N m−2 h−1 from the cyanobacterial and lichen crust, respectively, with N2O accounting for 53–66% of the total emission of nitrogenous gases. Microsensor measurements revealed that N2O was produced in the anoxic layer and thus apparently originated from incomplete denitrification. Using quantitative PCR, denitrification genes were detected in both the crusts and were expressed either in comparable (nirS) or slightly higher (narG) numbers in the cyanobacterial crusts. Although 99% of the nirS sequences in the cyanobacterial crust were affiliated to an uncultured denitrifying bacterium, 94% of these sequences were most closely affiliated to Paracoccus denitrificans in the lichen crust. Sequences of nosZ gene formed a distinct cluster that did not branch with known denitrifying bacteria. Our results demonstrate that nitrogen loss via denitrification is a dominant process in crusts from Oman, which leads to N2O gas emission and potentially reduces desert soil fertility.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrogen flux into the coastal environment via submarine groundwater discharge may be modulated by microbial processes such as denitrification, but the spatial scales at which microbial communities act and vary are not well understood. In this study, we examined the denitrifying community within the beach aquifer at Huntington Beach, California, where high-nitrate groundwater is a persistent feature. Nitrite reductase-encoding gene fragments (nirK and nirS), responsible for the key step in the denitrification pathway, were PCR amplified, cloned, and sequenced from DNAs extracted from aquifer sediments collected along a cross-shore transect, where groundwater ranged in salinity from 8 to 34 practical salinity units and in nitrate concentration from 0.5 to 330 μM. We found taxonomically rich and novel communities, with all nirK clones exhibiting <85% identity and nirS clones exhibiting <92% identity at the amino acid level to those of cultivated denitrifiers and other environmental clones in the database. Unique communities were found at each site, despite being located within 40 m of each other, suggesting that the spatial scale at which denitrifier diversity and community composition vary is small. Statistical analyses of nir sequences using the Monte Carlo-based program ∫-Libshuff confirmed that some populations were indeed distinct, although further sequencing would be required to fully characterize the highly diverse denitrifying communities at this site.  相似文献   

11.
Anammox and denitrification mediated by bacteria are known to be the major microbial processes converting fixed N to N2 gas in various ecosystems. Codenitrification and denitrification by fungi are additional pathways producing N2 in soils. However, fungal codenitrification and denitrification have not been well investigated in agricultural soils. To evaluate bacterial and fungal processes contributing to N2 production, molecular and 15N isotope analyses were conducted with soil samples collected at six different agricultural fields in the United States. Denitrifying and anammox bacterial abundances were measured based on quantitative PCR (qPCR) of nitrous oxide reductase (nosZ) and hydrazine oxidase (hzo) genes, respectively, while the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) of Fusarium oxysporum was quantified to estimate the abundance of codenitrifying and denitrifying fungi. 15N tracer incubation experiments with 15NO3 or 15NH4+ addition were conducted to measure the N2 production rates from anammox, denitrification, and codenitrification. Soil incubation experiments with antibiotic treatments were also used to differentiate between fungal and bacterial N2 production rates in soil samples. Denitrifying bacteria were found to be the most abundant, followed by F. oxysporum based on the qPCR assays. The potential denitrification rates by bacteria and fungi ranged from 4.118 to 42.121 nmol N2-N g−1 day−1, while the combined potential rates of anammox and codenitrification ranged from 2.796 to 147.711 nmol N2-N g−1 day−1. Soil incubation experiments with antibiotics indicated that fungal codenitrification was the primary process contributing to N2 production in the North Carolina soil. This study clearly demonstrates the importance of fungal processes in the agricultural N cycle.  相似文献   

12.
In contrast to most denitrifiers studied so far, Pseudomonas stutzeri TR2 produces low levels of nitrous oxide (N2O) even under aerobic conditions. We compared the denitrification activity of strain TR2 with those of various denitrifiers in an artificial medium that was derived from piggery wastewater. Strain TR2 exhibited strong denitrification activity and produced little N2O under all conditions tested. Its growth rate under denitrifying conditions was near comparable to that under aerobic conditions, showing a sharp contrast to the lower growth rates of other denitrifiers under denitrifying conditions. Strain TR2 was tolerant to toxic nitrite, even utilizing it as a good denitrification substrate. When both nitrite and N2O were present, strain TR2 reduced N2O in preference to nitrite as the denitrification substrate. This bacterial strain was readily able to adapt to denitrifying conditions by expressing the denitrification genes for cytochrome cd1 nitrite reductase (NiR) (nirS) and nitrous oxide reductase (NoS) (nosZ). Interestingly, nosZ was constitutively expressed even under nondenitrifying, aerobic conditions, consistent with our finding that strain TR2 preferred N2O to nitrite. These properties of strain TR2 concerning denitrification are in sharp contrast to those of well-characterized denitrifiers. These results demonstrate that some bacterial species, such as strain TR2, have adopted a strategy for survival by preferring denitrification to oxygen respiration. The bacterium was also shown to contain the potential to reduce N2O emissions when applied to sewage disposal fields.Wastewater treatment processes produce one of the major greenhouse effect gases, nitrous oxide (N2O) (7, 25, 30). The global warming potential of N2O relative to that of carbon dioxide (CO2) is 298 for a 100-year time horizon, and its concentration in the atmosphere continues to increase by about 0.26% per year (9). Nitrogen removal in wastewater treatment plants is essentially based on the activities of nitrifying and denitrifying microorganisms, both of which are inhabitants of activated sludge. Nitrifying bacteria aerobically oxidize ammonium to nitrite (NO2) and nitrate (NO3), which are then reduced anaerobically by denitrifying bacteria to gaseous nitrogen forms, such as N2O and dinitrogen (N2). It has long been known that N2O can be produced during both nitrification and denitrification processes of wastewater treatment (3, 19, 23), but the cause of N2O emission during the nitrification process was not clear. We recently showed, however, using activated sludge grown under conditions that mimicked a piggery wastewater disposal, that N2O emission during the nitrification process depends on denitrification by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (Nitrosomonas) (18). On the other hand, it is believed that denitrifying bacteria produce N2O as a by-product when anaerobiosis is insufficient during the denitrification process, because N2O reductase is the enzyme that is most sensitive to oxygen (6). Piggery wastewater, in particular, contains a high concentration of ammonia, and N2O emission tends to take place during the nitrogen removal process (5, 10). Experiments on the removal of ammonia and organic carbon by the aerobic denitrifier Pseudomonas stutzeri SU2 (24) and the heterotrophic nitrifier-aerobic denitrifier Alcaligenes faecalis no. 4 (16, 17) have been reported as examples of bioaugmentation in piggery wastewater treatment. Reduction of N2O emissions from pig manure compost by addition of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria has also been reported (11). However, there have been no reports of methods for reducing N2O emissions by bioaugmentation using aerobic denitrifying bacteria.Takaya et al. isolated the aerobic denitrifying bacterium Pseudomonas stutzeri TR2 (26). The denitrification activity of strain TR2 was monitored in batch and continuous cultures, using denitrification and artificial wastewater media, and the strain was found to keep a distinct activity (producing N2 from NO3) and to produce a very low level of N2O at a dissolved oxygen (O2) concentration of 1.25 mg liter−1. Therefore, strain TR2 should be useful in the future for reducing N2O emissions from wastewater treatment plants by bioaugmentation. To investigate the feasibility of using strain TR2 for future application to wastewater treatment processes, we examined its denitrification activity, N2O production, growth rate, and expression of denitrifying genes in batch cultures, using a medium that mimics the composition found in nitrogen removal wastewater plants. Comparison of the properties of strain TR2 with those of well-characterized denitrifying bacteria revealed characteristics of the strain that favor denitrification, although it can also respire oxygen.  相似文献   

13.
Quantitative PCR of denitrification genes encoding the nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide reductases was used to study denitrifiers across a glacier foreland. Environmental samples collected at different distances from a receding glacier contained amounts of 16S rRNA target molecules ranging from 4.9 × 105 to 8.9 × 105 copies per nanogram of DNA but smaller amounts of narG, nirK, and nosZ target molecules. Thus, numbers of narG, nirK, nirS, and nosZ copies per nanogram of DNA ranged from 2.1 × 103 to 2.6 × 104, 7.4 × 102 to 1.4 × 103, 2.5 × 102 to 6.4 × 103, and 1.2 × 103 to 5.5 × 103, respectively. The densities of 16S rRNA genes per gram of soil increased with progressing soil development. The densities as well as relative abundances of different denitrification genes provide evidence that different denitrifier communities develop under primary succession: higher percentages of narG and nirS versus 16S rRNA genes were observed in the early stage of primary succession, while the percentages of nirK and nosZ genes showed no significant increase or decrease with soil age. Statistical analyses revealed that the amount of organic substances was the most important factor in the abundance of eubacteria as well as of nirK and nosZ communities, and copy numbers of these two genes were the most important drivers changing the denitrifying community along the chronosequence. This study yields an initial insight into the ecology of bacteria carrying genes for the denitrification pathway in a newly developing alpine environment.  相似文献   

14.
Rice paddy soil has been shown to have strong denitrifying activity. However, the microbial populations responsible for nitrate respiration and denitrification have not been well characterized. In this study, we performed a clone library analysis of >1,000 clones of the nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene to characterize bacterial community structure in rice paddy soil. We also identified potential key players in nitrate respiration and denitrification by comparing the community structures of soils with strong denitrifying activity to those of soils without denitrifying activity. Clone library analysis showed that bacteria belonging to the phylum Firmicutes, including a unique Symbiobacterium clade, dominated the clones obtained in this study. Using the template match method, several operational taxonomic units (OTUs), most belonging to the orders Burkholderiales and Rhodocyclales, were identified as OTUs that were specifically enriched in the sample with strong denitrifying activity. Almost one-half of these OTUs were classified in the genus Herbaspirillum and appeared >10-fold more frequently in the soils with strong denitrifying activity than in the soils without denitrifying activity. Therefore, OTUs related to Herbaspirillum are potential key players in nitrate respiration and denitrification under the conditions used.Rice is one of the most important agronomic plants in the world (20). More than 135 million ha are used for rice cultivation worldwide, 88% of which consists of paddy fields (i.e., flooded fields) (16). Since rice paddy soil has limited available oxygen, various anaerobic biochemical processes can occur, including methane production, Mn4+ and Fe3+ reduction, nitrate respiration, and denitrification.Denitrification is a microbial respiratory process during which soluble nitrogen oxides (NO3 and NO2) are reduced to gaseous products (NO, N2O, and N2) (14, 43). Reduction of nitrate (NO3) to nitrite (NO2) is part of the denitrification process; however, this reaction can also be performed by nondenitrifiers. Reduction of nitrate to nitrite as an end product is called nitrate respiration (43). The emission of N2O from rice paddy soils is less than that from upland crop fields (2), which is probably due to complete nitrate-nitrite reduction to N2, since rice paddy soil is known to have strong denitrifying activity (28). However, the microbes responsible for denitrification in rice paddy soil are not well known.Denitrifying ability is sporadically distributed among taxonomically diverse groups of bacteria, as well as some archaea and fungi (14, 33, 43). Therefore, it is difficult to identify denitrifying organisms based only on their 16S rRNA gene sequences (33). However, culture-independent 16S rRNA gene analysis can be used to identify microbial populations responsive to denitrification-inducing conditions if they are properly differentiated from background populations. The 16S rRNA gene can provide taxonomic information about organisms which cannot be obtained from analyses targeting nitrite reductase genes (nirS and nirK) alone (34).One approach to differentiate functionally active populations from background populations is to use stable-isotope probing (SIP) (35). SIP was previously used to identify succinate-assimilating bacterial populations under denitrifying conditions in rice paddy soil, using nitrate and succinate as the electron acceptor and donor, respectively (37). Although SIP analysis can provide solid evidence that links function with taxonomy, it requires assimilation of isotopically labeled substrates. This may limit the application of SIP in studies of dissimilatory processes, such as nitrate respiration and denitrification. For example, previous SIP studies targeted bacteria assimilating 13C-labeled acetate, methanol, or succinate under denitrifying conditions (13, 30, 37).Another approach is to detect specifically enriched microbial populations under certain conditions by comparative analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences (9). This approach does not necessarily require addition of isotopically labeled substrates and therefore has the potential to identify microbes performing dissimilatory processes. Furthermore, the community structure of the total population can also be elucidated in this manner (10, 25, 36). However, the usefulness of comparative analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences has not been thoroughly tested. In addition, this approach has not been used to study nitrate respirators and denitrifiers.Consequently, the objectives of this study were (i) to characterize the soil bacterial population in rice paddy soil by clone library analysis of >1,000 clones of the nearly full-length 16S rRNA gene and (ii) to identify active bacterial populations under denitrification-inducing conditions by comparing clone libraries.  相似文献   

15.
Adaptation of Denitrifying Populations to Low Soil pH   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Natural denitrification rates and activities of denitrifying enzymes were measured in an agricultural soil which had a 20-year past history of low pH (pH ca. 4) due to fertilization with acid-generating ammonium salts. The soil adjacent to this site had been limed and had a pH of ca. 6.0. Natural denitrification rates of these areas were of similar magnitude: 158 ng of N g−1 of soil day−1 for the acid soil and 390 ng of N g−1 of soil day−1 at the neutral site. Estimates of in situ denitrifying enzyme activity were higher in the neutral soil, but substantial enzyme activity was also detected in the acid soil. Rates of nitrous oxide reduction were very low, even when NO3 and NO2 were undetectable, and were ca. 400 times lower than the rates of N2O production from NO3. Denitrification rates measured in slurries of the acid and neutral soil showed distinctly different pH optima (pH 3.9 and pH 6.3) which were near the pH values of the two soils. This suggests that an acid-tolerant denitrifying population had been selected during the 20-year period of low pH.  相似文献   

16.
The kinetics of denitrification and the causes of nitrite and nitrous oxide accumulation were examined in resting cell suspensions of three denitrifiers. An Alcaligenes species and a Pseudomonas fluorescens isolate characteristically accumulated nitrite when reducing nitrate; a Flavobacterium isolate did not. Nitrate did not inhibit nitrite reduction in cultures grown with tungstate to prevent formation of an active nitrate reductase; rather, accumulation of nitrite seemed to depend on the relative rates of nitrate and nitrite reduction. Each isolate rapidly reduced nitrous oxide even when nitrate or nitrite had been included in the incubation mixture. Nitrate also did not inhibit nitrous oxide reduction in Alcaligenes odorans, an organism incapable of nitrate reduction. Thus, added nitrate or nitrite does not always cause nitrous oxide accumulation, as has often been reported for denitrifying soils. All strains produced small amounts of nitric oxide during denitrification in a pattern suggesting that nitric oxide was also under kinetic control similar to that of nitrite and nitrous oxide. Apparent Km values for nitrate and nitrite reduction were 15 μM or less for each isolate. The Km value for nitrous oxide reduction by Flavobacterium sp. was 0.5 μM. Numerical solutions to a mathematical model of denitrification based on Michaelis-Menten kinetics showed that differences in reduction rates of the nitrogenous compounds were sufficient to account for the observed patterns of nitrite, nitric oxide, and nitrous oxide accumulation. Addition of oxygen inhibited gas production from 13NO3 by Alcaligenes sp. and P. fluorescens, but it did not reduce gas production by Flavobacterium sp. However, all three isolates produced higher ratios of nitrous oxide to dinitrogen as the oxygen tension increased. Inclusion of oxygen in the model as a nonspecific inhibitor of each step in denitrification resulted in decreased gas production but increased ratios of nitrous oxide to dinitrogen, as observed experimentally. The simplicity of this kinetic model of denitrification and its ability to unify disparate observations should make the model a useful guide in research on the physiology of denitrifier response to environmental effectors.  相似文献   

17.
A pink-pigmented symbiotic bacterium was isolated from hybrid poplar tissues (Populus deltoides × nigra DN34). The bacterium was identified by 16S and 16S-23S intergenic spacer ribosomal DNA analysis as a Methylobacterium sp. (strain BJ001). The isolated bacterium was able to use methanol as the sole source of carbon and energy, which is a specific attribute of the genus Methylobacterium. The bacterium in pure culture was shown to degrade the toxic explosives 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazene (RDX), and octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5-tetrazocine (HMX). [U-ring-14C]TNT (25 mg liter−1) was fully transformed in less than 10 days. Metabolites included the reduction derivatives amino-dinitrotoluenes and diamino-nitrotoluenes. No significant release of 14CO2 was recorded from [14C]TNT. In addition, the isolated methylotroph was shown to transform [U-14C]RDX (20 mg liter−1) and [U-14C]HMX (2.5 mg liter−1) in less than 40 days. After 55 days of incubation, 58.0% of initial [14C]RDX and 61.4% of initial [14C]HMX were mineralized into 14CO2. The radioactivity remaining in solution accounted for 12.8 and 12.7% of initial [14C]RDX and [14C]HMX, respectively. Metabolites detected from RDX transformation included a mononitroso RDX derivative and a polar compound tentatively identified as methylenedinitramine. Since members of the genus Methylobacterium are distributed in a wide diversity of natural environments and are very often associated with plants, Methylobacterium sp. strain BJ001 may be involved in natural attenuation or in situ biodegradation (including phytoremediation) of explosive-contaminated sites.  相似文献   

18.
We investigated communities of denitrifying bacteria from adjacent meadow and forest soils. Our objectives were to explore spatial gradients in denitrifier communities from meadow to forest, examine whether community composition was related to ecological properties (such as vegetation type and process rates), and determine phylogenetic relationships among denitrifiers. nosZ, a key gene in the denitrification pathway for nitrous oxide reductase, served as a marker for denitrifying bacteria. Denitrifying enzyme activity (DEA) was measured as a proxy for function. Other variables, such as nitrification potential and soil C/N ratio, were also measured. Soil samples were taken along transects that spanned meadow-forest boundaries at two sites in the H. J. Andrews Experimental Forest in the Western Cascade Mountains of Oregon. Results indicated strong functional and structural community differences between the meadow and forest soils. Levels of DEA were an order of magnitude higher in the meadow soils. Denitrifying community composition was related to process rates and vegetation type as determined on the basis of multivariate analyses of nosZ terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism profiles. Denitrifier communities formed distinct groups according to vegetation type and site. Screening 225 nosZ clones yielded 47 unique denitrifying genotypes; the most dominant genotype occurred 31 times, and half the genotypes occurred once. Several dominant and less-dominant denitrifying genotypes were more characteristic of either meadow or forest soils. The majority of nosZ fragments sequenced from meadow or forest soils were most similar to nosZ from the Rhizobiaceae group in α-Proteobacteria species. Denitrifying community composition, as well as environmental factors, may contribute to the variability of denitrification rates in these systems.  相似文献   

19.
Complete removal of plants and soil to exposed bedrock, in order to eradicate the Hole-in-the-Donut (HID) region of the Everglades National Park, FL, of exotic invasive plants, presented the opportunity to monitor the redevelopment of soil and the associated microbial communities along a short-term restoration chronosequence. Sampling plots were established for sites restored in 1989, 1997, 2000, 2001, and 2003. The goal of this study was to characterize the activity and diversity of denitrifying bacterial populations in developing HID soils in an effort to understand changes in nitrogen (N) cycling during short-term primary succession. Denitrifying enzyme activity (DEA) was detected in soils from all sites, indicating a potential for N loss via denitrification. However, no correlation between DEA and time since disturbance was observed. Diversity of bacterial denitrifiers in soils was characterized by sequence analysis of nitrite reductase genes (nirK and nirS) in DNA extracts from soils ranging in nitrate concentrations from 1.8 to 7.8 mg kg−1. High levels of diversity were observed in both nirK and nirS clone libraries. Statistical analyses of clone libraries suggest a different response of nirS- and nirK-type denitrifiers to factors associated with soil redevelopment. nirS populations demonstrated a linear pattern of succession, with individual lineages represented at each site, while multiple levels of analysis suggest nirK populations respond in a grouped pattern. These findings suggest that nirK communities are more sensitive than nirS communities to environmental gradients in these soils.  相似文献   

20.
[13C6]salicylate, [U-13C]naphthalene, and [U-13C]phenanthrene were synthesized and separately added to slurry from a bench-scale, aerobic bioreactor used to treat soil contaminated with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Incubations were performed for either 2 days (salicylate, naphthalene) or 7 days (naphthalene, phenanthrene). Total DNA was extracted from the incubations, the “heavy” and “light” DNA were separated, and the bacterial populations associated with the heavy fractions were examined by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and 16S rRNA gene clone libraries. Unlabeled DNA from Escherichia coli K-12 was added to each sample as an internal indicator of separation efficiency. While E. coli was not detected in most analyses of heavy DNA, a low number of E. coli sequences was recovered in the clone libraries associated with the heavy DNA fraction of [13C]phenanthrene incubations. The number of E. coli clones recovered proved useful in determining the relative amount of light DNA contamination of the heavy fraction in that sample. Salicylate- and naphthalene-degrading communities displayed similar DGGE profiles and their clone libraries were composed primarily of sequences belonging to the Pseudomonas and Ralstonia genera. In contrast, heavy DNA from the phenanthrene incubations displayed a markedly different DGGE profile and was composed primarily of sequences related to the Acidovorax genus. There was little difference in the DGGE profiles and types of sequences recovered from 2- and 7-day incubations with naphthalene, so secondary utilization of the 13C during the incubation did not appear to be an issue in this experiment.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号