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1.
The activities of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase, methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase, methylenetetrahydromethanopterin reductase, and heterodisulfide reductase were tested in cell extracts of 10 different methanogenic bacteria grown on H2/CO2 or on other methanogenic substrates. The four activities were found in all the organisms investigated: Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum,M. wolfei, Methanobrevibacter arboriphilus, Methanosphaera stadtmanae, Methanosarcina barkeri (strains Fusaro and MS), Methanothrix soehngenii, Methanospirillum hungatei, Methanogenium organophilum, and Methanococcus voltae. Cell extracts of H2/CO2 grown M. barkeri and of methanol grown M. barkeri showed the same specific activities suggesting that the four enzymes are of equal importance in CO2 reduction to methane and in methanol disproportionation to CO2 and CH4. In contrast, cell extracts of acetate grown M. barkeri exhibited much lower activities of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase and methylenetetrahydromethanopterin dehydrogenase suggesting that these two enzymes are not involved in methanogenesis from acetate. In M. stadtmanae, which grows on H2 and methanol, only heterodisulfide reductase was detected in activities sufficient to account for the in vivo methane formation rate. This finding is consistent with the view that the three other oxidoreductases are not required for methanol reduction to methane with H2.  相似文献   

2.
Methanosarcina barkeri (strain MS) grew and converted acetate to CO2 and methane after an adaption period of 20 days. Growth and metabolism were rapid with gas production being comparable to that of cells grown on H2 and CO2. After an intermediary growth cycle under a H2 and CO2 atmosphere acetateadapted cells were capable of growth on acetate with formation of methane and CO2. When acetate-adapted Methanosarcina barkeri was co-cultered with Acetobacterium woodii on fructose or glucose as substrate, a complete conversion of the carbohydrate to gases (CO2 and CH4) was observed.Abbreviation CMC carboxymethyl cellulose  相似文献   

3.
Methanosarcina barkeri strain Fusaro was found to grow on pyruvate as sole carbon and energy source after an incubation period of 10–12 weeks in the presence of high pyruvate concentrations (100 mM). Growth studies, cell suspension experiments and enzymatic investigations were performed with pyruvate-utilizing M. barkeri. For comparison acetate-adapted cells of M. barkeri were analyzed.
  1. Pyruvate-utilizing M. barkeri grew on pyruvate (100 mM) with an initial doubling time of about 25 h (37 °C, pH 6.5) up to cell densities of about 0.8 g cell dry weight/l. The specific growth rate was linearily dependent on the pyruvate concentration up to 100 mM indicating that pyruvate was taken up by passive diffusion. Only CO2 and CH4 were detected as fermentation products. As calculated from fermentation balances pyruvate was converted to CH4 and CO2 according to following equation: Pyruvate-+H++0.5 H2O » 1.25 CH4+1.75 CO2. The molar growth yield (Ych 4) was about 14 g dry weight cells/mol CH4. In contrast the growth yield (Ych 4) of M. barkeri during growth on acctate (Acetate-+H+ » CH4+CO2) was about 3 g/mol CH4.
  2. Cell suspensions of pyruvate-grown M. barkeri catalyzed the conversion of pyruvate to CH4, CO2 and H2 (5–15 nmol pyruvate consumed/min x mg protein). At low cell concentrations (0.5 mg protein/ml) 1 mol pyruvate was converted to 1 mol CH4, 2 mol CO2 and 1 mol H2. At higher cell concentration less H2 and CO2 and more CH4 were formed due to CH4 formation from H2/CO2. The rate of pyruvate conversion was linearily dependent on the pyruvate concentration up to about 30 mM. Cell suspensions of acetate-grown M. barkeri also catalyzed the conversion of 1 mol pyruvate to 1 mol CH4, 2 mol CO2 and 1 mol H2 at similar rates and with similar affinity for pyruvate as pyruvate-grown cells.
  3. Cell extracts of both pyruvate-grown and acetate-grown M. barkeri contained pyruvate: ferredoxin oxidoreductase. The specific activity in pyruvate-grown cells (0.8 U/mg) was 8-fold higher than in acetate-grown cells (0.1 U/mg). Coenzyme F420 was excluded as primary electron acceptor of pyruvate oxidoreductase. Cell extracts of pyruvate-grown M. barkeri contained carbon monoxide dehydrogenase activity and hydrogenase activity catalyzing the reduction by carbon monoxide and hydrogen of both methylviologen and ferredoxin (from Clostridium).
This is the first report on growth of a methanogen on pyruvate as sole carbon and energy source, i.e. on a substrate more complex than acetate.  相似文献   

4.
The pterin compound lumazine [2, 4-(1H, 3H)-pteridinedione] inhibited the growth of several methanogenic archaea completely at a concentration of ≤ 0.6 mM and was bacteriocidal for Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum strain Marburg. In contrast, growth of two non-methanogenic archaea, several eubacteria, and one eukaryote was not strongly affected at much higher concentrations. In washed-cell suspensions, methanogenesis from H2 and CO2 by Mb. thermoautotrophicum or from H2 and methanol by Methanosarcina barkeri was inhibited by addition of lumazine. In cell-free extracts of Mb. thermoautotrophicum, H2-driven methane production from CO2 or CH3-S-CoM was completely inhibited by 0.6 mM lumazine. The results suggest that the compound may be useful in probing the methanogenesis pathway or in selecting against methanogens. Received: 30 January 1996 / Accepted 15 May 1996  相似文献   

5.
Isolation and Identification of Ruminal Methanogens from Grazing Cattle   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
To obtain information on the diversity of ruminal methanogens in grazing animals, three ruminal methanogens from grazing cattle were characterized and identified. Two of the isolates were rod-shaped, with one staining Gram-positive and being non-motile (BRM9), and the other (BRM16) staining Gram-negative and being motile. These isolates grew only on H2/CO2 and formate, and optimally at 38°C and pH 6.5–7.0. The third isolate (CM1) was non-motile, pseudosarcina-shaped, and grew on H2/CO2, acetate, and methyl-containing compounds, with optimal growth at 40°C and pH 6.5. DNA was prepared from the three isolates, and their 16S rRNA genes were sequenced. Phenotypic data and comparisons of nearly complete 16S rDNA sequences showed that BRM9, BRM16, and CM1 are strains of Methanobacterium formicicum, Methanomicrobium mobile, and Methanosarcina barkeri respectively. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first information on ruminal methanogens in cattle maintained under grazing management. Received: 26 October 1999 / Accepted: 22 November 1999  相似文献   

6.
We measured F420-dependent N5,N10-methylenetetrahydro-methanopterin dehydrogenase, N5, N10-methenyltetrahydro-methanopterin cyclohydrolase, and F420-reducing hydrogenase levels in Methanosarcina barkeri grown on various substrates. Variation in dehydrogenase levels during growth on a specific substrate was usually <3-fold, and much less for cyclohydrolase. H2–CO2-, methanol-, and H2–CO2+ methanol-grown cells had roughly equivalent levels of dehydrogenase and cyclohydrolase. In acetate-grown cells cyclohydrolase level was lowered 2 to 3-fold and dehydrogenase 10 to 80-fold; this was not due to repression by acetate, since, if cultures growing on acetate were supplemented with methanol or H2–CO2, dehydrogenase levels increased 14 to 19-fold, and cyclohydrolase levels by 3 to 4-fold. Compared to H2–CO2- or methanol-grown cells, acetate-or H2–CO2 + methanol-grown cells had lower levels of and less growth phase-dependent variation in hydrogenase activity. Our data are consistent with the following hypotheses: 1. M. barkeri oxidizes methanol via a portion of the CO2-reduction pathway operated in the reverse direction. 2. When steps from CO2 to CH3-S-CoM in the CO2-reduction pathway (in either direction) are not used for methanogenesis, hydrogenase activity is lowered.Abbreviations MF methanofuran - H4MPT 5,6,7,8-tetrahydromethanopterin - HS-HTP 7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate - CoM-S-S-HTP heterodisulfide of HS-CoM and HS-HTP - F420 coenzyme F420 (a 7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deaza-riboflavin derivative) - H2F420 reduced coenzyme F420 - HC+=H4MPT N5,N10-methenyl-H4MPT - H2C=H4MPT N5,N10-methylene-H4MPT - H3C=H4MPT N5-methyl-H4MPT - BES 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid  相似文献   

7.
Cell extracts of Methanosarcina barkeri grown on methanol in media supplemented with molybdate exhibited a specific activity of formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase of approximately 1 U (1 mol/min)/mg protein. When the growth medium was supplemented with tungstate rather than with molybdate, the specific activity was only 0.04 U/mg. Despite this reduction in specific activity growth on methanol was not inhibited. An inhibition of both growth and synthesis of active formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase was observed, however, when H2 and CO2 were the energy substrates. The results indicate that, in contrast to Methanobacterium wolfei and Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum, M. barkeri possesses only a molybdenum containing formylmethanofuran dehydrogenase and not in addition a tungsten isoenzyme.  相似文献   

8.
When grown in the absence of added sulfate, cocultures of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans or Desulfovibrio vulgaris with Methanobrevibacter smithii (Methanobacterium ruminantium), which uses H2 and CO2 for methanogenesis, degraded lactate, with the production of acetate and CH4. When D. desulfuricans or D. vulgaris was grown in the absence of added sulfate in coculture with Methanosarcina barkeri (type strain), which uses both H2-CO2 and acetate for methanogenesis, lactate was stoichiometrically degraded to CH4 and presumably to CO2. During the first 12 days of incubation of the D. desulfuricans-M. barkeri coculture, lactate was completely degraded, with almost stoichiometric production of acetate and CH4. Later, acetate was degraded to CH4 and presumably to CO2. In experiments in which 20 mM acetate and 0 to 20 mM lactate were added to D. desulfuricans-M. barkeri cocultures, no detectable degradation of acetate occurred until the lactate was catabolized. The ultimate rate of acetate utilization for methanogenesis was greater for those cocultures receiving the highest levels of lactate. A small amount of H2 was detected in cocultures which contained D. desulfuricans and M. barkeri until after all lactate was degraded. The addition of H2, but not of lactate, to the growth medium inhibited acetate degradation by pure cultures of M. barkeri. Pure cultures of M. barkeri produced CH4 from acetate at a rate equivalent to that observed for cocultures containing M. barkeri. Inocula of M. barkeri grown with H2-CO2 as the methanogenic substrate produced CH4 from acetate at a rate equivalent to that observed for acetate-grown inocula when grown in a rumen fluid-vitamin-based medium but not when grown in a yeast extract-based medium. The results suggest that H2 produced by the Desulfovibrio species during growth with lactate inhibited acetate degradation by M. barkeri.  相似文献   

9.
Two strains of Methanosarcina (M. Barkeri strain MS, isolated from sewage sludge, and strain UBS, isolated from lake sediments) were found to have similar cellular properties and to have DNA base compositions of 44 mol percent guanosine plus cytosine. Strain MS was selected for further studies of its one-carbon metabolism. M. barkeri grew autotrophically via H2 oxidation/CO2 reduction. The optimum temperature for growth and methanogenesis was 37°C. H2 oxidation proceeded via an F420-dependent NADP+-linked hydrogenase. A maximum specific activity of hydrogenase in cell-free extracts, using methyl viologen as electron acceptor, was 6.0 mol min · mg protein at 37°C and the optimum pH (9.0). M. barkeri also fermented methanol andmethylamine as sole energy sources for growth. Cell yields during growth on H2/CO2 and on methanol were 6.4 and 7.2 mg cell dry weight per mmol CH4 formed, respectively. During mixotrophic growth on H2/CO2 plus methanol, most methane was derived from methanol rather than from CO2. Similar activities of hydrogenase were observed in cell-free extracts from H2/CO2-grown and methanol-grown cells. Methanol oxidation apparently proceeded via carrierbound intermediates, as no methylotrophy-type of methanol dehydrogenase activity was observed in cell-free extracts. During growth on methanol/CO2, up to 48% of the cell carbon was derived from methanol indicating that equivalent amounts of cell carbon were derived from CO2 and from an organic intermediate more reduced than CO2. Cell-free extracts lacked activity for key cell carbon synthesis enzymes of the Calvin cycle, serine path, or hexulose path.Abbreviations CAPS cycloaminopropane sulfonic acid - CH3-SCoM methyl coenzyme M - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol - DEAE diethylaminoethyl - dimethyl POPOP 1,4-bis-2-(4-mothyl-5-phenyloxazolyl)-benzene - DNA deoxyribonucleic acid - dpm dismtegrations per min - DTT dithiothreitol - EDTA ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid - F420 factor 420 - G+C guanosine plus cytosine - NAD+ nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide - NADP+ nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate - PBBW phosphate buffered basal Weimer - PMS phenazine methosulfate - PPO 2,5-diphenyloxazole - rRNA ribosomal ribonucleic acid - RuBP ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate - Tris tris-hydroxymethyl-aminomethane - max maximum specific growth rate  相似文献   

10.
Corrinoids in several diverse species of methanogens were quantified by a bioassay utilizingEscherichia coli 113–3, a corrinoid auxotroph. All five species examined contained >0.65 nmol corrinoid/mg dry cells when grown on H2/CO2 as carbon and energy source. The highest corrinoid levels (4.1 nmol/mg cells) were found inMethanosarcina barkeri grown on methanol. The amount of corrinoids found in this species was dependent on growth conditions, but, regardless of energy source, metabolized levels inMethanosarcina barkeri were higher than those found in theMethanobacterium species examined (M. arbophilicum, M. formicium, M. ruminantium, andM. thermoautotrophicum).  相似文献   

11.
Methanogenic archaea are generally thought to use tetrahydromethanopterin or tetrahydrosarcinapterin (H4SPT) rather than tetrahydrofolate (H4F) as a pterin C1 carrier. However, the genome sequence of Methanosarcina species recently revealed a cluster of genes, purN, folD, glyA and metF, that are predicted to encode for H4F-specific enzymes. We show here for folD and glyA from M. barkeri that this prediction is correct: FolD (bifunctional N5,N10-methylene-H4F dehydrogenase/N5,N10-methenyl-H4F cyclohydrolase) and GlyA (serine:H4F hydroxymethyltransferase) were heterologously overproduced in Escherichia coli, purified and found to be specific for methylene-H4F and H4F, respectively (apparent Km below 5 M). Western blot analyses and enzyme activity measurements revealed that both enzymes were synthesized in M. barkeri. The results thus indicate that M. barkeri should contain H4F, which was supported by the finding that growth of M. barkeri was dependent on folic acid and that the vitamin could be substituted by p-aminobenzoic acid, a biosynthetic precursor of H4F. From the p-aminobenzoic acid requirement, an intracellular H4F concentration of approximately 5 M was estimated. Evidence is presented that the p-aminobenzoic acid taken up by the growing cells was not required for the biosynthesis of H4SPT, which was found to be present in the cells at a concentration above 3 mM. The presence of both H4SPT and H4F in M. barkeri is in agreement with earlier isotope labeling studies indicating that there are two separate C1 pools in these methanogens.  相似文献   

12.
A system is described that combines the fermentation of cellulose to acetate, CH4, and CO2 by Ruminococcus albus and Methanobrevibacter smithii with the fermentation of acetate to CH4 and CO2 by Methanosarcina barkeri to convert cellulose to CH4 and CO2. A cellulose-containing medium was pumped into a co-culture of the cellulolytic R. albus and the H2-using methanogen, Mb. smithii. The effluent was fed into a holding reservoir, adjusted to pH 4.5, and then pumped into a culture of Ms. barkeri maintained at constant volume by pumping out culture contents. Fermentation of 1% cellulose to CH4 and CO2 was accomplished during 132 days of operation with retention times (RTs) of the Ms. barkeri culture of 7.5–3.8 days. Rates of acetate utilization were 9.5–17.3 mmol l−1 day−1 and increased with decreasing RT. The K s for acetate utilization was 6–8 mM. The two-stage system can be used as a model system for studying biological and physical parameters that influence the bioconversion process. Our results suggest that manipulating the different phases of cellulose fermentation separately can effectively balance the pH and ionic requirements of the acid-producing phase with the acid-using phase of the overall fermentation. Received: 7 December 1999 / Received revision: 28 April 2000 / Accepted: 19 May 2000  相似文献   

13.
We compared the metabolism of methanol and acetate when Methanosarcina barkeri was grown in the presence and absence of Desulfovibrio vulgaris. The sulfate reducer was not able to utilize methanol or acetate as the electron donor for energy metabolism in pure culture, but was able to grow in coculture. Pure cultures of M. barkeri produced up to 10 μmol of H2 per liter in the culture headspace during growth on acetate or methanol. In coculture with D. vulgaris, the gaseous H2 concentration was ≤2 μmol/liter. The fractions of 14CO2 produced from [14C]methanol and 2-[14C]acetate increased from 0.26 and 0.16, respectively, in pure culture to 0.59 and 0.33, respectively, in coculture. Under these conditions, approximately 42% of the available electron equivalents derived from methanol or acetate were transferred and were utilized by D. vulgaris to reduce approximately 33 μmol of sulfate per 100 μmol of substrate consumed. As a direct consequence, methane formation in cocultures was two-thirds that observed in pure cultures. The addition of 5.0 mM sodium molybdate or exogenous H2 decreased the effects of D. vulgaris on the metabolism of M. barkeri. An analysis of growth and carbon and electron flow patterns demonstrated that sulfate-dependent interspecies H2 transfer from M. barkeri to D. vulgaris resulted in less methane production, increased CO2 formation, and sulfide formation from substrates not directly utilized by the sulfate reducer as electron donors for energy metabolism and growth.  相似文献   

14.
Methanosarcina barkeri grows in defined media with acetate, methanol or carbon dioxide as carbon sources. Methanol is used for methanogenesis at a 5 times higher rate as compared with the other substrates. M. barkeri can use the substrates simultaneously, but due to acidification or alkalification of the medium during growth on methanol or acetate, respectively, growth and methanogenesis may stop before the substrates are exhausted. Growth and methanogenesis on methanol or acetate are inhibited by the presence of an excess of H2; the inhibition is abolished by the addition of carbon dioxide, which probably serves as an essential source of cell carbon, in the absence of which methano-genesis ceases.  相似文献   

15.
Formaldehyde activating enzyme (Fae) was first discovered in methylotrophic bacteria, where it is involved in the oxidation of methanol to CO2 and in formaldehyde detoxification. The 18 kDa protein catalyzes the condensation of formaldehyde with tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT) to methylene-H4MPT. We describe here that Fae is also present and functional in the methanogenic archaeon Methanosarcina barkeri. The faeA homologue in the genome of M. barkeri was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli and the overproduced purified protein shown to actively catalyze the condensation reaction: apparent V max=13 U/mg protein (1 U=μmol/min); apparent Km for H4MPT=30 μM; apparent Km for formaldehyde=0.1 mM. By Western blot analysis the concentration of Fae in cell extracts of M. barkeri was determined to be in the order of 0.1% of the soluble cell proteins. Besides the faeA gene the genome of M. barkeri harbors a second gene, faeB-hpsB, which is shown to code for a 42 kDa protein with both Fae activity (3.6 U/mg) and hexulose-6-phosphate synthase (Hps) activity (4.4 U/mg). The results support the recent proposal that in methanogenic archaea Fae and Hps could have a function in ribose phosphate synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET) is potentially an effective form of syntrophy in methanogenic communities, but little is known about the diversity of methanogens capable of DIET. The ability of Methanosarcina barkeri to participate in DIET was evaluated in coculture with Geobacter metallireducens. Cocultures formed aggregates that shared electrons via DIET during the stoichiometric conversion of ethanol to methane. Cocultures could not be initiated with a pilin-deficient G. metallireducens strain, suggesting that long-range electron transfer along pili was important for DIET. Amendments of granular activated carbon permitted the pilin-deficient G. metallireducens isolates to share electrons with M. barkeri, demonstrating that this conductive material could substitute for pili in promoting DIET. When M. barkeri was grown in coculture with the H2-producing Pelobacter carbinolicus, incapable of DIET, M. barkeri utilized H2 as an electron donor but metabolized little of the acetate that P. carbinolicus produced. This suggested that H2, but not electrons derived from DIET, inhibited acetate metabolism. P. carbinolicus-M. barkeri cocultures did not aggregate, demonstrating that, unlike DIET, close physical contact was not necessary for interspecies H2 transfer. M. barkeri is the second methanogen found to accept electrons via DIET and the first methanogen known to be capable of using either H2 or electrons derived from DIET for CO2 reduction. Furthermore, M. barkeri is genetically tractable, making it a model organism for elucidating mechanisms by which methanogens make biological electrical connections with other cells.  相似文献   

17.
Following long-term labeling with [1-13C]acetate, [2-13C]acetate, 13CO2, H13COOH, or 13CH3OH, NMR spectroscopy was used to determine the labeling patterns of the purified ribonucleosides of Methanospirillum hungatei, Methanococcus voltae, Methanobrevibacter smithii, Methanosphaera stadtmanae, Methanosarcina barkeri and Methanobacterium bryantii. Major differences were observed among the methanogens studied, specifically at carbon positions 2 and 8 of the purines, positions at which one-carbon carriers are involved during synthesis. In Methanospirillum hungatei and Methanosarcina barkeri, the labcl at both positions came from carbon atom C-2 of acetate, as predicted from known eubacterial pathways, whereas in Methanococcus voltae and Methanobacterium bryantii both originated from CO2. In Methanosphaera stadtmanae grown in the presence of formate, the C-2 of purines originated exclusively from formate and the C-8 was labeled by the C-2 of acetate. When grown in media devoid of formate, the C-2 of the purine ring originated mainly from the C-2 of acetate and in part from CH3OH. In Methanobrevibacter smithii grown in the presence of formate, C-2 and C-8 of purines were derived from CO2 and/or formate. The labeling patterns obtained for pyrimidines are consistent with the biosynthetic pathways common to eubacteria and eucaryotes.Abbreviations CODH Carbon monoxide dehydrogenase - FH4 tetrahydrofolate - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin Issued as NRCC Publication No. 37383  相似文献   

18.
The conversion of methyl-tetrahydromethanopterin to methylcoenzyme M inMethanosarcina barkeri is catalyzed by two enzymes: an enzyme with a bound corrinoid, which becomes methylated during the reaction and an enzyme which tranfers the methyl group from this corrinoid to coenzyme M. As in the similar methyltransfer reaction inMethanobacterium thermoautotrophicum the corrinoid enzyme inM. barkeri needs to be activated by H2 and ATP. ATP can be replaced by Ti(III)citrate or CO.  相似文献   

19.
Methanosarcina barkeri was recently shown to contain two cytoplasmic isoenzymes of methylcobalamin: coenzyme M methyltransferase (methyltransferase 2). Isoenzyme I predominated in methanol-grown cells and isoenzyme II in acetate-grown cells. It was therefore suggested that isoenzyme I functions in methanogenesis from methanol and isoenzyme II in methanogenesis from acetate. We report here that cells of M. barkeri grown on trimethylamine, H2/CO2, or acetate contain mainly isoenzyme II. These cells were found to have in common that they can catalyze the formation of methane from trimethylamine and H2, whereas only acetate-grown cells can mediate the formation of methane from acetate. Methanol-grown cells, which contained only low concentrations of isoenzyme II, were unable to mediate the formation of methane from both trimethylamine and acetate. These and other results suggest that isoenzyme II (i) is employed for methane formation from trimethylamine rather than from acetate, (ii) is constitutively expressed rather than trimethylamine-induced, and (iii) is repressed by methanol. The constitutive expression of isoenzyme II in acetate-grown M. barkeri can explain its presence in these cells. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of isoenzyme I and isoenzyme II were analyzed and found to be only 55% similar.Abbreviations H-S-CoM coenzyme M or 2-mercaptoethane-sulfonate - CH3-S-CoM methyl-coenzyme M or 2(methylthio)-ethanesulfonate - [Co] cobalamin - CH3-[Co] methylcobalamin - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CH3-H4MPT N 5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin - MT1 methyltransferase 1 or methanol: 5-hydroxybenzimidazolyl cobamide methyltransferase - MT2 methyltransferase 2 or methylcobalamin: coenzyme M methyltransferase - Mops morpholinopropanesulfonate - 1 U = 1 mol/min  相似文献   

20.
Seedling recruitment is an important determinant of community structure in desert ecosystems. Positive photosynthetic growth and water balance responses to increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations ([CO2]) are predicted to be substantial in desert plants, suggesting that recruitment could be stimulated. However, to date no studies have addressed the response of perennial plant recruitment in natural populations of desert shrubs exposed to elevated [CO2]. In April 1997, we employed Free‐Air Carbon Dioxide Enrichment (FACE) in order to increase atmospheric [CO2] in an undisturbed Mojave Desert ecosystem from ambient (~~ 370 µmol mol?1) to elevated CO2 (~~ 550 µmol mol?1). From 1997 to 2001 we seasonally examined survival, growth, gas exchange and water potential responses of Larrea tridentata and Ambrosia dumosa seedlings that germinated in Fall, 1997. Recruitment densities were not influenced by [CO2] in either species, although a two‐fold higher adult Ambrosia density under elevated [CO2] resulted in two‐fold higher seedling density (0.87 vs 0.40 seedlings m?2). Mortality was greatest for both species during the first summer (1998), despite above‐average rainfall during the previous Winter–Spring. A significant [CO2] × time interaction revealed that early survival was greater under elevated CO2, whereas a significant species time interaction revealed that overall survival was greater for Ambrosia (28%) than for Larrea (15%), regardless of [CO2]. Microsite (understorey or interspace) alone had no significant influence on survival. Significant species, microsite and species × microsite effects on growth (seedling height, stem diameter and canopy size) were found, but elevated CO2 had minimal impact on these parameters. Photosynthetic rates (Asat) for both species were higher at elevated [CO2] during certain seasons, but not consistently so. These results suggest that increased atmospheric [CO2] may enhance carbon (C) assimilation and survival of aridland perennial shrubs during favourable growing conditions, but that it may not counteract the effects of prolonged drought on mortality.  相似文献   

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