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1.
The denitrification capacity of sediment from a hypereutrophic lake   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
SUMMARY.
  • 1 In sediment from Wintergreen Lake, Michigan, denitrification was not detectable by the acetylene inhibition method at in situ nitrate concentrations. When nitrate was added to sediment slurries, denitrification capacities up to 18.8μg N g-1 h-1 were measured. The denitrification capacities decreased with increasing sediment depth and distance from shore.
  • 2 The high denitrification capacities in these sediments which under natural conditions had no supply of nitrate and oxygen suggested that denitrifies with alternative mechanisms for anaerobic energy conversion were present. Nitrous oxide was a significant portion of the N-gas produced immediately after the nitrate addition. Small amounts (4–5% of the total N-gas production) of nitric oxide accumulated in the early phase of nitrate reduction. Presumably after depletion of nitrate and nitrite both N2O and NO were further reduced to N2.
  • 3 About 70%r of the added nitrate was denitrified, and the remainder was assumed to have been reduced to ammonium.
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2.
Measurements of denitrification using the acetylene inhibition,15N isotope tracer, and N2 flux methods were carried out concurrently using sediment cores from Vilhelmsborg sø, Denmark, in an attempt to clarify some of the limitations of each technique. Three experimental treatments of overlying water were used: control, nitrate enriched, and ammonia enriched water. The N2 flux and15N tracer experiments showed high rates of coupled nitrification/denitrification in the sediments. The acetylene inhibition method did not capture any coupled nitrification/denitrification. This could be explained by acetylene inhibition of nitrification. A combined15N tracer/acetylene inhibition experiment demonstrated that acetylene inhibition of N2O reduction was incomplete and the method, therefore, only measured approximately 50% of the denitrification due to nitrate from the overlying water. Similar rates of denitrification due to nitrate in the overlying water were measured by the N2 flux method and the acetylene inhibition method, after correcting for the 50% efficiency of acetylene inhibition. Rates of denitrification due to nitrate from the overlying water measured by the15N tracer method, however, were only approximately 35% or less of those measured by the acetylene inhibition or N2 flux methods.  相似文献   

3.
Denitrification in San Francisco Bay Intertidal Sediments   总被引:23,自引:17,他引:6       下载免费PDF全文
The acetylene block technique was employed to study denitrification in intertidal estuarine sediments. Addition of nitrate to sediment slurries stimulated denitrification. During the dry season, sediment-slurry denitrification rates displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, and ambient NO3 + NO2 concentrations (≤26 μM) were below the apparent Km (50 μM) for nitrate. During the rainy season, when ambient NO3 + NO2 concentrations were higher (37 to 89 μM), an accurate estimate of the Km could not be obtained. Endogenous denitrification activity was confined to the upper 3 cm of the sediment column. However, the addition of nitrate to deeper sediments demonstrated immediate N2O production, and potential activity existed at all depths sampled (the deepest was 15 cm). Loss of N2O in the presence of C2H2 was sometimes observed during these short-term sediment incubations. Experiments with sediment slurries and washed cell suspensions of a marine pseudomonad confirmed that this N2O loss was caused by incomplete blockage of N2O reductase by C2H2 at low nitrate concentrations. Areal estimates of denitrification (in the absence of added nitrate) ranged from 0.8 to 1.2 μmol of N2 m−2 h−1 (for undisturbed sediments) to 17 to 280 μmol of N2 m−2 h−1 (for shaken sediment slurries).  相似文献   

4.
Denitrifying activity in a sediment from the freshwater part of a polluted estuary in northwest Europe was quantified using two independent approaches. High-resolution N2O microprofiles were recorded in sediment cores to which acetylene was added to the overlying water and injected laterally into the sediment. The vertical distribution of the rate of denitrification supported by nitrate uptake from the overlying water was then derived from the time series N2O concentration profiles. The rates obtained for the core incubations were compared to the rates predicted by a forward reactive transport model, which included rate expression for denitrification calibrated with potential rate measurements obtained in flowthrough reactors containing undisturbed, 1-cm-thick sediment slices. The two approaches yielded comparable rate profiles, with a near-surface, 2- to 3-mm narrow zone of denitrification and maximum in situ rates on the order of 200 to 300 nmol cm−3 h−1. The maximum in situ rates were about twofold lower than the maximum potential rate for the 0- to 1-cm depth interval of the sediment, indicating that in situ denitrification was nitrate limited. The experimentally and model-derived rates of denitrification implied that there was nitrate uptake by the sediment at a rate that was on the order of 50 (± 10) nmol cm−2 h−1, which agreed well with direct nitrate flux measurements for core incubations. Reactive transport model calculations showed that benthic uptake of nitrate at the site is particularly sensitive to the nitrate concentration in the overlying water and the maximum potential rate of denitrification in the sediment.  相似文献   

5.
Dissimilatory nitrate reduction (denitrification) in subsurface sediments by indigenous microflora was investigated in samples obtained over a range of depths from 0 to 289 m. Denitrifying activity in sediment samples retrieved from similar stratigraphic horizons at four different sites was determined by measuring the accumulation of N2O using the acetylene blockage technique. Denitrification was detected in unamended samples which received only prereduced deionized water at almost all depths in all sediments sampled. The surface sediments showed the highest denitrification activity. In the deeper sediments, denitrifying activity was much higher in saturated sandy samples and lower or absent in drier clay samples. Addition of nitrate enhanced denitrification activity in all samples from below the water table down to the maximum depth sampled (289 m), while addition of a carbon (succinate) source in general had no stimulatory effect. These results show that denitrifying microorganisms were present in all of the deep subsurface sediments tested in this study. Furthermore, these results suggest that adequate supplies of metabolizable organic carbon were available to support denitrifying activity. However, denitrification may be limited by inadequate supplies of nitrate in the sediments.  相似文献   

6.
A method has been developed for measurement of denitrification activity in sediments by application of the acetylene inhibition technique. Acetylene-saturated water was injected, at close intervals, into sediment cores which were then incubated for a few hours at the in situ temperature. Frozen segments of the cores were assayed for accumulation of N2O by a combined gas extraction and detection system. The segments were thawed under a stream of helium from which N2O (and other gases) was collected in a liquid N2 trap, and the quantity of N2O was measured by gas chromatography. The maximum rate of denitrification in a coastal marine sediment was 35 nmol of N per cm3 of sediment per day at 2.5°C, and the rate of denitrification for the total sediment was 0.99 nmol of N per m2 per day.  相似文献   

7.
In the global nitrogen cycle, bacterial denitrification is recognized as the only quantitatively important process that converts fixed nitrogen to atmospheric nitrogen gas, N2, thereby influencing many aspects of ecosystem function and global biogeochemistry. However, we have found that a process novel to the marine nitrogen cycle, anaerobic oxidation of ammonium coupled to nitrate reduction, contributes substantially to N2 production in marine sediments. Incubations with 15N-labeled nitrate or ammonium demonstrated that during this process, N2 is formed through one-to-one pairing of nitrogen from nitrate and ammonium, which clearly separates the process from denitrification. Nitrite, which accumulated transiently, was likely the oxidant for ammonium, and the process is thus similar to the anammox process known from wastewater bioreactors. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation accounted for 24 and 67% of the total N2 production at two typical continental shelf sites, whereas it was detectable but insignificant relative to denitrification in a eutrophic coastal bay. However, rates of anaerobic ammonium oxidation were higher in the coastal sediment than at the deepest site and the variability in the relative contribution to N2 production between sites was related to large differences in rates of denitrification. Thus, the relative importance of anaerobic ammonium oxidation and denitrification in N2 production appears to be regulated by the availability of their reduced substrates. By shunting nitrogen directly from ammonium to N2, anaerobic ammonium oxidation promotes the removal of fixed nitrogen in the oceans. The process can explain ammonium deficiencies in anoxic waters and sediments, and it may contribute significantly to oceanic nitrogen budgets.  相似文献   

8.
Bonin  Patricia  Omnes  Patrick  Chalamet  Alain 《Hydrobiologia》1998,389(1-3):169-182
Dissimilatory nitrate reductions in coastal marine sediment of Carteau Cove (French Mediterranean Coast) were studied between April 1993 and July 1994. Simultaneous determination of denitrification and dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium was achieved by using a combination of acetylene blockage and 15N techniques. After short incubations (maximum 5 h), a part of 15N labelled nitrate added to the sediment was recovered as ammonium without incorporation in organic matter. The result indicate that a fraction of nitrate was reduced to ammonium by a dissimilatory mechanism instead of denitrifying. Denitrifying and nitrate ammonifying activities ranged from 0 to 19.8 μmol l-1 d-1 and from 2.3 to 83.2 μmol l-1 d-1, respectively. Denitrification rates were highest in early spring whereas nitrate ammonification were highest in fall. The recovery of nitrate reduced as N2O-N plus ammonium was between 40 and 100%, the highest nitrogen losses were recorded in July. Depending on the station and time of year denitrification accounted for between 0 and 43% of the total nitrate reduction whereas dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) accounted for between 18 and 100%. The reduction rate data suggest that the pathway of nitrate reduction to ammonium may be important in coastal sediments. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

9.
The acetylene block technique was used to assay denitrification in undisturbed sediment cores of an intertidal mud flat. Nitrogen loss due to this process was estimated at 1 to 41 kg of N/hectare (ha) per year. Anaerobic nitrate-saturated slurry of the same sediment had a denitrification capacity of 1,026 kg of N/ha per year. The acetylene block technique failed at low nitrate concentrations, so that denitrification at average in situ nitrate concentrations could not be determined. Denitrification followed zero-order kinetics at nitrate concentrations high enough to allow successful blockage of N2O reduction. Thus, an estimate of in situ rates based on kinetic parameters and in situ nitrate concentrations was impossible. No denitrification was observed in a slurry of the top 1.5 cm under aerated conditions and nitrate saturation. In undisturbed sediment, significant denitrification occurred in few discrete sites within a matrix of undetectable or low activity. Despite numerous errors contributing to the uncertainty of the estimate of in situ rates, the result obtained by this method was considered more valuable than the determination of denitrification capacities. Methods which include severe changes of physical and chemical parameters may frequently lead to overestimates of denitrification rates.  相似文献   

10.
The capacity for dissimilatory reduction of NO3 to N2 (N2O) and NH4+ was measured in 15NO3-amended marine sediment. Incubation with acetylene (7 × 10−3 atmospheres [normal]) caused accumulation of N2O in the sediment. The rate of N2O production equaled the rate of N2 production in samples without acetylene. Complete inhibition of the reduction of N2O to N2 suggests that the “acetylene blockage technique” is applicable to assays for denitrification in marine sediments. The capacity for reduction of NO3 by denitrification decreased rapidly with depth in the sediment, whereas the capacity for reduction of NO3 to NH4+ was significant also in deeper layers. The data suggested that the latter process may be equally as significant as denitrification in the turnover of NO3 in marine sediments.  相似文献   

11.
The regulatory roles of temperature, eutrophication and oxygen availability on benthic nitrogen (N) cycling and the stoichiometry of regenerated nitrogen and phosphorus (P) were explored along a Baltic Sea estuary affected by treated sewage discharge. Rates of sediment denitrification, anammox, dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA), nutrient exchange, oxygen (O2) uptake and penetration were measured seasonally. Sediments not affected by the nutrient plume released by the sewage treatment plant (STP) showed a strong seasonality in rates of O2 uptake and coupled nitrification–denitrification, with anammox never accounting for more than 20 % of the total dinitrogen (N2) production. N cycling in sediments close to the STP was highly dependent on oxygen availability, which masked temperature-related effects. These sediments switched from low N loss and high ammonium (NH4 +) efflux under hypoxic conditions in the fall, to a major N loss system in the winter when the sediment surface was oxidized. In the fall DNRA outcompeted denitrification as the main nitrate (NO3 ?) reduction pathway, resulting in N recycling and potential spreading of eutrophication. A comparison with historical records of nutrient discharge and denitrification indicated that the total N loss in the estuary has been tightly coupled to the total amount of nutrient discharge from the STP. Changes in dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) released from the STP agreed well with variations in sedimentary N2 removal. This indicates that denitrification and anammox efficiently counterbalance N loading in the estuary across the range of historical and present-day anthropogenic nutrient discharge. Overall low N/P ratios of the regenerated nutrient fluxes impose strong N limitation for the pelagic system and generate a high potential for nuisance cyanobacterial blooms.  相似文献   

12.
Denitrification in aquatic sediments was measured by an N2O reductase assay. Sediments consumed small added quantities of N2O over short periods (a few hours). In experiments with sediment slurries, N2O reductase activity was inhibited by O2, C2H2, heat treatment, and by high levels of nitrate (1 mM) or sulfide (10 mM). However, ambient levels of nitrate (<100 μM) did not influence activity, and moderate levels (about 150 μM) induced only a short lag before reductase activity began. Moderate levels of sulfide (<1 mM) had no effect on N2O reductase activity. Nitrous oxide reductase displayed Michaelis-Menten kinetics in sediments from freshwater (Km = 2.17 μM), estuarine (Km = 14.5 μM), and alkaline-saline (Km = 501 μM) environments. An in situ assay was devised in which a solution of N2O was injected into sealed glass cores containing intact sediment. Two estimates of net rates of denitrification in San Francisco Bay under approximated in situ conditions were 0.009 and 0.041 mmol of N2O per m2 per h. Addition of chlorate to inhibit denitrification in these intact-core experiments (to estimate gross rates of N2O consumption) resulted in approximately a 14% upward revision of estimates of net rates. These results were comparable to an in situ estimate of 0.022 mmol of N2O per m2 per h made with the acetylene block assay.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrate and nitrite concentrations in the water and nitrous oxide and nitrite fluxes across the sediment-water interface were measured monthly in the River Colne estuary, England, from December 1996 to March 1998. Water column concentrations of N2O in the Colne were supersaturated with respect to air, indicating that the estuary was a source of N2O for the atmosphere. At the freshwater end of the estuary, nitrous oxide effluxes from the sediment were closely correlated with the nitrite concentrations in the overlying water and with the nitrite influx into the sediment. Increases in N2O production from sediments were about 10 times greater with the addition of nitrite than with the addition of nitrate. Rates of denitrification were stimulated to a larger extent by enhanced nitrite than by nitrate concentrations. At 550 μM nitrite or nitrate (the highest concentration used), the rates of denitrification were 600 μmol N · m−2 · h−1 with nitrite but only 180 μmol N · m−2 · h−1 with nitrate. The ratios of rates of nitrous oxide production and denitrification (N2O/N2 × 100) were significantly higher with the addition of nitrite (7 to 13% of denitrification) than with nitrate (2 to 4% of denitrification). The results suggested that in addition to anaerobic bacteria, which possess the complete denitrification pathway for N2 formation in the estuarine sediments, there may be two other groups of bacteria: nitrite denitrifiers, which reduce nitrite to N2 via N2O, and obligate nitrite-denitrifying bacteria, which reduce nitrite to N2O as the end product. Consideration of free-energy changes during N2O formation led to the conclusion that N2O formation using nitrite as the electron acceptor is favored in the Colne estuary and may be a critical factor regulating the formation of N2O in high-nutrient-load estuaries.  相似文献   

14.
Denitrifying activity in a sediment from the freshwater part of a polluted estuary in northwest Europe was quantified using two independent approaches. High-resolution N(2)O microprofiles were recorded in sediment cores to which acetylene was added to the overlying water and injected laterally into the sediment. The vertical distribution of the rate of denitrification supported by nitrate uptake from the overlying water was then derived from the time series N(2)O concentration profiles. The rates obtained for the core incubations were compared to the rates predicted by a forward reactive transport model, which included rate expression for denitrification calibrated with potential rate measurements obtained in flowthrough reactors containing undisturbed, 1-cm-thick sediment slices. The two approaches yielded comparable rate profiles, with a near-surface, 2- to 3-mm narrow zone of denitrification and maximum in situ rates on the order of 200 to 300 nmol cm(-3) h(-1). The maximum in situ rates were about twofold lower than the maximum potential rate for the 0- to 1-cm depth interval of the sediment, indicating that in situ denitrification was nitrate limited. The experimentally and model-derived rates of denitrification implied that there was nitrate uptake by the sediment at a rate that was on the order of 50 (+/- 10) nmol cm(-2) h(-1), which agreed well with direct nitrate flux measurements for core incubations. Reactive transport model calculations showed that benthic uptake of nitrate at the site is particularly sensitive to the nitrate concentration in the overlying water and the maximum potential rate of denitrification in the sediment.  相似文献   

15.
Peatlands cover more than 30% of the Finnish land area and impact N2O fluxes. Denitrifiers release N2O as an intermediate or end product. In situ N2O emissions of a near pH neutral pristine fen soil in Finnish Lapland were marginal during gas chamber measurements. However, nitrate and ammonium fertilization significantly stimulated in situ N2O emissions. Stimulation with nitrate was stronger than with ammonium. N2O was produced and subsequently consumed in gas chambers. In unsupplemented anoxic microcosms, fen soil produced N2O only when acetylene was added to block nitrous oxide reductase, suggesting complete denitrification. Nitrate and nitrite stimulated denitrification in fen soil, and maximal reaction velocities (vmax) of nitrate or nitrite dependent denitrification where 18 and 52 nmol N2O h-1 gDW -1, respectively. N2O was below 30% of total produced N gases in fen soil when concentrations of nitrate and nitrite were <500 μM. vmax for N2O consumption was up to 36 nmol N2O h-1 gDW -1. Denitrifier diversity was assessed by analyses of narG, nirK/nirS, and nosZ (encoding nitrate-, nitrite-, and nitrous oxide reductases, respectively) by barcoded amplicon pyrosequencing. Analyses of ~14,000 quality filtered sequences indicated up to 25 species-level operational taxonomic units (OTUs), and up to 359 OTUs at 97% sequence similarity, suggesting diverse denitrifiers. Phylogenetic analyses revealed clusters distantly related to publicly available sequences, suggesting hitherto unknown denitrifiers. Representatives of species-level OTUs were affiliated with sequences of unknown soil bacteria and Actinobacterial, Alpha-, Beta-, Gamma-, and Delta-Proteobacterial sequences. Comparison of the 4 gene markers at 97% similarity indicated a higher diversity of narG than for the other gene markers based on Shannon indices and observed number of OTUs. The collective data indicate (i) a high denitrification and N2O consumption potential, and (ii) a highly diverse, nitrate limited denitrifier community associated with potential N2O fluxes in a pH-neutral fen soil.  相似文献   

16.
By constructing a budget of nitrate inputs and outputs in several gravel-pit lakes and directly measuring denitrification through the emission of N2O (using acetylene method), it was possible to evaluate the depolluting activity in the lakes in relation to groundwaters. Seasonal monitoring of the denitrification process allowed us to appraise the influence of various factors such as nitrate concentration, the bioavailability of carbon compounds and the temperature. The application of denitrification towards an improvement of the quality of the water pumped in the wellfields is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
A mixed beech and spruce forest soil was incubated under potential denitrification assay (PDA) condition with 10% acetylene (C2H2) in the headspace of soil slurry bottles. Nitrous oxide (N2O) concentration in the headspace, as well as nitrate, nitrite and ammonium concentrations in the soil slurries were monitored during the incubation. Results show that nitrate disappearance rate was higher than N2O production rate with C2H2 blockage during the incubation. Sum of nitrate, nitrite, and N2O with C2H2 blockage could not recover the original soil nitrate content, showing an N imbalance in such a closed incubation system. Changes in nitrite and ammonium concentration during the incubation could not account for the observed faster nitrate disappearance rate and the N imbalance. Non-determined nitric oxide (NO) and N2 production could be the major cause, and the associated mechanisms could vary for different treatments. Commonly applied PDA measurement likely underestimates the nitrate removal capacity of a system. Incubation time and organic matter/nitrate ratio are the most critical factors to consider using C2H2 inhibition technique to quantify denitrification. By comparing the treatments with and without an antibiotic, the results suggest that microbial N uptake probably played a minor role in N balance, and other denitrifying enzymes but nitrate reductase could be substantially synthesized during the incubation.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract The dissimilatory nitrate-reducing processes, denitrification, and dissimilatory nitrate-reduction to ammonium were studied in freshwater lake sediments within healthy and degrading Phragmites australis (reed) stands. The samples from the healthy vegetation site contained roots and rhizomes. Cores were supplied with 1.9–5.2 μg 15N-NO3 g−1 dry sediment in the laboratory and subsequently incubated for 8 h at 20°C, in the dark. The 15N compounds were determined before (natural percentage of 15N) and after 1 and 8 h of incubation. The uptake of 15N by the roots and rhizomes in the healthy vegetation was 61%. Nitrogen losses, interpreted as denitrification, accounted for 25 and 84% of the added 15N-NO3 in sediment from the healthy and degrading vegetation sites, respectively. The percentages of nitrate reduced to ammonium were 4 and 9% in sediment from the healthy vegetation and degrading vegetation sites, respectively. The percentage of 15N–total N in the sediment of the healthy vegetation site was 10%, whereas for the degrading vegetation site this percentage was 7%. The percentage of nitrate reduced to ammonium could be potentially underestimated by the percentage of 15N measured in the sediment. In this case, in healthy and degenerating P. australis stands, the percentage of produced ammonium accounted for 14–16%. The nitrate reduction rates were calculated based on an incubation period of one hour. The denitrification rate in sediment from the degrading vegetation site was higher than from the healthy vegetation site. The rate of dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium was almost tenfold higher in sediment from the degrading vegetation site compared to sediment from the healthy vegetation site. The significantly lower percentages of dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium and denitrification in the healthy stand compared to the degrading stand was probably due to the presence of roots and rhizomes. In the sediments of healthy and degrading P. australis stands, denitrification was the main nitrate-reducing process. Received: 24 July 1996; Accepted: 5 December 1996  相似文献   

19.
Factors controlling the anaerobic oxidation of ammonium with nitrate and nitrite were explored in a marine sediment from the Skagerrak in the Baltic-North Sea transition. In anoxic incubations with the addition of nitrite, approximately 65% of the nitrogen gas formation was due to anaerobic ammonium oxidation with nitrite, with the remainder being produced by denitrification. Anaerobic ammonium oxidation with nitrite exhibited a biological temperature response, with a rate optimum at 15°C and a maximum temperature of 37°C. The biological nature of the process and a 1:1 stoichiometry for the reaction between nitrite and ammonium indicated that the transformations might be attributed to the anammox process. Attempts to find other anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing processes in this sediment failed. The apparent Km of nitrite consumption was less than 3 μM, and the relative importance of ammonium oxidation with nitrite and denitrification for the production of nitrogen gas was independent of nitrite concentration. Thus, the quantitative importance of ammonium oxidation with nitrite in the jar incubations at elevated nitrite concentrations probably represents the in situ situation. With the addition of nitrate, the production of nitrite from nitrate was four times faster than its consumption and therefore did not limit the rate of ammonium oxidation. Accordingly, the rate of this process was the same whether nitrate or nitrite was added as electron acceptor. The addition of organic matter did not stimulate denitrification, possibly because it was outcompeted by manganese reduction or because transport limitation was removed due to homogenization of the sediment.  相似文献   

20.
The inhibition of nitrous oxide (N2O) reduction by acetylene (C2H2) in saltmarsh sediment was temporary; we investigated this phenomenon and possible causes. The reduction of N2O in the presence of C2H2 was biological. N2O consumption in the presence of C2H2 began when nitrate concentration became very low. The time course of N2O consumption after periods of N2O accumulation was unaffected by initial nitrate concentrations between 16 and 200M, or C2H2 concentrations between 10 and 100% of the gas phase. Sulfide had no effect on the kinetics of N2O reduction in the presence of C2H2. In more dilute slurries of saltmarsh sediments and in estuarine sediment, N2O persisted in the presence of C2H2 unless sufficient organic carbon was added to deplete nitrate. In saltmarsh sediments, the rate of N2O consumption in the presence of C2H2 was not changed by preincubation with C2H2. Initial positive rates of N2O production in the presence of C2H2 occurred only when the block was apparently effective (i.e., at nitrate concentrations greater than about 5–10M) and appeared to represent a valid estimate of denitrification. Conversely, and in agreement with previous studies, concentrations of NO3 below these levels resulted in reduced efficiency of C2H2 blockage of N2O reductase.  相似文献   

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