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1.
In anaerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans the dissimilatory nitrate reductase is linked to the respiratory chain at the level of cytochromes b. Electron transport to nitrite and nitrous oxide involves c-type cytochromes. During electron transport from NADH to nitrate one phosphorylation site is passed, whereas two sites are passed during electron transport from NADH to oxygen, nitrite and nitrous oxide. The presentation of a respiratory chain as a linear array of electron carriers gives a misleading picture of the efficiency of energy conservation since the location of the reductases is not taken into account. For the reduction of nitrite and nitrous oxide, protons are utilized from the periplasmic space, whereas for the reduction of oxygen and nitrate, protons are utilized from the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane. Evidence for two transport systems for nitrate was obtained. One is driven by the proton motive force; this system is used to initiate nitrate reduction. The second system is a nitrate-nitrite antiport system. A scheme for proton translocation and electron transport to nitrate, nitrite, nitrous oxide and oxygen is presented. The number of charges translocated across the membrane during flow of two electrons from NADH is the same for all nitrogenous oxides and is 67-71% of that during electron transfer to oxygen via cytochrome o. These findings are in accordance with growth yield studies. YMAX electron values determined in chemostat cultures for growth with various substrates and hydrogen acceptors are proportional to the number of charges translocated to these hydrogen acceptors during electron transport.  相似文献   

2.
(1) Under anaerobic conditions the respiratory chain in cells of Paracoccus denitrificans, from late exponential cultures grown anaerobically with nitrate as electron acceptor and succinate as carbon source, has been shown to reduce added nitrate via nitrite and nitrous oxide to nitrogen without any accumulation of these intermediates. (2) Addition of nitrous oxide to cells reducing nitrate strongly inhibited the latter reaction. The inhibition was reversed by preventing electron flow to nitrous oxide with either antimycin or acetylene. Electron flow to nitrous oxide thus resembles electron flow to oxygen in its inhibitory effect on nitrate reduction. In contrast, addition of nitrite to an anaerobic suspension of cells reducing nitrate resulted in a stimulation of nitrate reductase activity. Usually, addition of nitrite also partially overcame the inhibitory effect of nitrous oxide on nitrate reduction. The reason why added nitrous oxide, but not nitrite, inhibits nitrate reduction is suggested to be related to the higher reductase activity of the cells for nitrous oxide compared with nitrite. Explanations for the unexpected stimulation of nitrate reduction by nitrite in the presence or absence of added nitrous oxide are considered. (3) Nitrous oxide reductase was shown to be a periplasmic protein that competed with nitrite reductase for electrons from reduced cytochrome c. Added nitrous oxide strongly inhibited the reduction of added nitrite. (4) Nitrite reductase activity of cells was strongly inhibited by oxygen in the presence of physiological reductants, but nitrite reduction did occur in the presence of oxygen when isoascorbate plus N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine was the reductant. It is concluded that competition for available electrons by two oxidases, cytochrome aa3 and cytochrome o, severely restricted electron flow to the nitrite reductase (cytochrome cd). For this reason it is unlikely that the oxidase activity of this cytochrome is ever functional in cells. (5) The mechanism by which electron flow to oxygen or nitrous oxide inhibits nitrate reduction in cells has been investigated. It is argued that relatively small changes in the extent of reduction of ubiquinone, or of another component of the respiratory chain with similar redox potential, critically determine the capacity for reducing nitrate. The argument is based on: (i) the response of an anthroyloxystearic acid fluorescent probe that is sensitive to changes in the oxidation state of ubiquinone; (ii) consideration of the total rates of electron flow through ubiquinone both in the presence of oxygen and in the presence of nitrate under anaerobic conditions; (iii) use of relative extents of oxidation of b-type cytochromes as an indicator of ubiquinone redox state, especially the finding that b-type cytochrome of the antimycin-sensitive part of the respiratory chain is more oxidised in the presence of added nitrous oxide, which inhibits nitrate reduction, than in the presence of added nitrite which does not inhibit. Arguments against b- or c-type cytochromes themselves controlling nitrate reduction are given. (6) In principle, control on nitrate reduction could be exerted either upon electron flow or upon the movement of nitrate to the active site of its reductase. The observations that inverted membrane vesicles and detergent-treated cells reduced nitrate and oxygen simultaneously at a range of total rates of electron flow are taken to support the latter mechanism. The failure of an additional reductant, durohydroquinone, to activate nitrate reduction under aerobic conditions in the presence of succinate is also evidence that it is not an inadequate supply of electrons that prevents the functioning of nitrate reductase under aerobic conditions. (7) In inverted membrane vesicles the division of electron flow between nitrate and oxygen is determined by a competition mechanism, in contrast to cells. This change in behaviour upon converting cells to vesicles cannot be attributed to loss of cytochrome c, and therefore of oxidase activity, from the vesicles because a similar change in behaviour was seen with vesicles prepared from cells of a cytochrome c-deficient mutant.  相似文献   

3.
1. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectra at 8-60 K of NADH-reduced membrane particles prepared from Paracoccus denitrificans grown anaerobically with nitrate as terminal electron acceptor show the presence of iron-sulfur centers 1-4 in the NADH-ubiquinone segment of the respiratory chain. In addition resonance lines at g = 2.058, g = 1.953 and g = 1.88 are detectable in the spectra of succinate-reduced membranes at 15 K, which are attributed to the iron-sulfur-containing nitrate reductase. 2. Sulphate-limited growth under anaerobic conditions does not affect the iron-sulfur pattern of NADH dehydrogenase or nitrate reductase. Furthermore respiratory chain-linked electron transport and its inhibition by rotenone are not influenced. These results contrast those observed for sulphate-limited growth of P. denitrificans under aerobic conditions [Eur. J. Biochem. (1977) 81, 267-275]. 3. Proton translocation studies of whole cells indicate that nitrite increases the proton conductance of the cytoplasmic membrane, resulting in a collapse of the proton gradient across the membrane. Nitrite accumulates under anaerobic growth conditions with nitrate as terminal electron acceptor; the extent of accumulation depends on the specific growth conditions. Thus the low efficiencies of respiratory chain-linked energy conservation observed during nitrate respiration [Arch. Microbiol. (1977) 112, 17-23] can be explained by the uncoupling action of nitrite.  相似文献   

4.
1. A method is described for preparing spheroplasts from Paracoccus denitrificans that are substantially depleted of dissimilatory nitrate reductase (cytochrome cd) activity. Treatment of cells with lysozyme + EDTA together with a mild osmotic shock, followed by centrifugation, yielded a pellet of spheroplasts and a supernatant that contained d-type cytochrome. The spheroplasts were judged to have retained an intact plasma membrane on the basis that less than 1% of the activity of a cytoplasmic marker protein, malate dehydrogenase, was released from the spheroplasts. In addition to a low activity towards added nitrite, the suspension of spheroplasts accumulated the nitrite that was produced by respiratory chain-linked reduction of nitrate. It is concluded that nitrate reduction occurs at the periplasmic side of the plasma membrane irrespective of whether nitrite is generated by nitrate reduction or is added exogenously. 2. Further evidence for the integrity of the spheroplasts was that nitrate reduction was inhibited by O2, and that chlorate was reduced at a markedly lower rate than nitrate. These data are taken as evidence for an intact plasma membrane because it was shown that cells acquire the capability to reduce nitrate under aerobic conditions after addition of low amounts of Triton X-100 which, with the same titre, also overcame the permeability barrier to chlorate reduction by intact cells. The close relationship between the appearance of chlorate reduction and the loss of the inhibitory effect of O2 on nitrate reduction also suggests that the later feature of nitrate respiration is due to a control on the accessibility of nitrate to its reductase rather than on the flow of electrons to nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

5.
Staphylococcus carnosus reduces nitrate to ammonia in two steps. (i) Nitrate was taken up and reduced to nitrite, and nitrite was subsequently excreted. (ii) After depletion of nitrate, the accumulated nitrite was imported and reduced to ammonia, which again accumulated in the medium. The localization, energy gain, and induction of the nitrate and nitrite reductases in S. carnosus were characterized. Nitrate reductase seems to be a membrane-bound enzyme involved in respiratory energy conservation, whereas nitrite reductase seems to be a cytosolic enzyme involved in NADH reoxidation. Syntheses of both enzymes are inhibited by oxygen and induced to greater or lesser degrees by nitrate or nitrite, respectively. In whole cells, nitrite reduction is inhibited by nitrate and also by high concentrations of nitrite (> or = 10 mM). Nitrite did not influence nitrate reduction. Two possible mechanisms for the inhibition of nitrite reduction by nitrate that are not mutually exclusive are discussed. (i) Competition for NADH nitrate reductase is expected to oxidize the bulk of the NADH because of its higher specific activity. (ii) The high rate of nitrate reduction could lead to an internal accumulation of nitrite, possibly the result of a less efficient nitrite reduction or export. So far, we have no evidence for the presence of other dissimilatory or assimilatory nitrate or nitrite reductases in S. carnosus.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Stoicheometries and rates of proton translocation associated with respiratory reduction of NO3- have been measured for spheroplasts of Escherichia coli grown anaerobically in the presence of NO3-. Observed stoicheiometries [leads to H+/NO3- ratio; P. Mitchell (1966) Chemiosmotic Coupling in Oxidative and Photosynthetic Phosphorylation, Glynn Research, Bodmin] were approx. 4 for L-malate oxidation and approx. 2 for succinate, D-lactate and glycerol oxidation. Measurements of the leads to H+/2e- ratio with formate as the reductant and oxygen or NO3- as the oxidant were complicated by pH changes associated with formate uptake and CO2 formation. Nevertheless, it was possible to conclude that the site of formate oxidation is on the inner aspect of the cytoplasmic membrane, that the leads to H+/O ratio for formate oxidation is approx. 4, and that the leads to H+/NO3- ratio is greater than 2. Measurements of the rate of NO3- penetration into osmotically sensitive spheroplasts demonstrated an electrogenic entry of NO3- anion. The permeability coefficient for nitrate entry at 30 degrees C was between 10(-9) and 10(-10) cm- s(-1). The calculated rate of nitrate entry at the concentration typically used for the assay of nitrate reductase (EC 1.7.99.4) activity was about 0.1% of that required to support the observed rate of nitrate reduction by reduced Benzyl Viologen. Measurements of the distribution of nitrate between the intracellular and extracellular spaces of a haem-less mutant, de-repressed for nitrate reductase but unable to reduce nitrate by the respiratory chain, showed that, irrespective of the presence or the absence of added glucose, nitrate was not concentrated intracellularly. Osmotic-swelling experiments showed that the rate of diffusion of azid anion across the cytoplasmic membrane is relatively low in comparison with the fast diffusion of hydrazoic acid. The inhibitory effect of azide on nitrate reductase was not altered by treatments that modify pH gradients across the cytoplasmic membrane. It is concluded that the nitrate-reducing azide-sensitive site of nitrate reductase is located on the outer aspect of the cytoplasmic membrane. The consequences of this location for mechanisms of proton translocation driven by nitrate reduction are discussed, and lead to the proposal that the nitrate reductase of the cytoplasmic membrane is vectorial, reducing nitrate on the outer aspect of the membrane with 2H+ and 2e- that have crossed from the inner aspect of the membrane.  相似文献   

8.
Two polytopic membrane proteins, NarK and NarU, are assumed to transport nitrite out of the Escherichia coli cytoplasm, but how nitrate enters enteric bacteria is unknown. We report the construction and use of four isogenic strains that lack nitrate reductase Z and the periplasmic nitrate reductase, but express all combinations of narK and narU. The active site of the only functional nitrate reductase, nitrate reductase A, is located in the cytoplasm, so nitrate reduction by these four strains is totally dependent upon a mechanism for importing nitrate. These strains were exploited to determine the roles of NarK and NarU in both nitrate and nitrite transport. Single mutants that lack either NarK or NarU were competent for nitrate-dependent anaerobic growth on a non-fermentable carbon source, glycerol. They transported and reduced nitrate almost as rapidly as the parental strain. In contrast, the narK-narU double mutant was defective in nitrate-dependent growth unless nitrate transport was facilitated by the nitrate ionophore, reduced benzyl viologen (BV). It was also unable to catalyse nitrate reduction in the presence of physiological electron donors. Synthesis of active nitrate reductase A and the cytoplasmic, NADH-dependent nitrite reductase were unaffected by the narK and narU mutations. The rate of nitrite reduction catalysed by the cytoplasmic, NADH-dependent nitrite reductase by the double mutant was almost as rapid as that of the NarK+-NarU+ strain, indicating that there is a mechanism for nitrite uptake by E. coli that is in-dependent of either NarK or NarU. The nir operon encodes a soluble, cytoplasmic nitrite reductase that catalyses NADH-dependent reduction of nitrite to ammonia. One additional component that contributes to nitrite uptake was shown to be NirC, the hydrophobic product of the third gene of the nir operon, which is predicted to be a polytopic membrane protein with six membrane-spanning helices. Deletion of both NarK and NirC decreased nitrite uptake and reduction to a basal rate that was fully restored by a single chromosomal copy of either narK or nirC. A multicopy plasmid encoding NarU complemented a narK mutation for nitrite excretion, but not for nitrite uptake. We conclude that, in contrast to NirC, which transports only nitrite, NarK and NarU provide alternative mechanisms for both nitrate and nitrite transport. However, NarU might selectively promote nitrite ex-cretion, not nitrite uptake.  相似文献   

9.
The decrease in the electron flow of the aerobic respiratory chain of the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans, owing to either the drop in the saturation of terminal oxidases by oxygen or to the inhibition of the rate of respiration by azide or nitrite, resulted in the synthesis of dissimilatory nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase. The dependence of the resulting activities of the two enzymes (after a three-hour adaptation) on the initial value of the parameter Vmax/kLa (oxidase activity of the volume unit of the culture divided by the volumetric oxygen transfer coefficient) or on the concentrations of the inhibitors had a similar form, characterized by the appearance of a maximum. The increasing parts of the obtained curves reflect the synthesis of enzymes, probably initiated by the increase in the intracellular degree of reduction, the subsequent drop being evidently in connection with the lack of metabolic energy for biosynthesis. The possible mechanisms of the effect of nitrogenous terminal acceptors (NO-3 and NO-2) on the formation of the denitrification pathway are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Nitrate transport and its regulation by O2 in Pseudomonas aeruginosa   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an obligate respirer which can utilize nitrate as a terminal electron acceptor under anaerobic conditions (denitrification). Immediate, transient regulation of nitrate respiration is mediated by oxygen through the inhibition of nitrate uptake. In order to gain an understanding of the bioenergetics of nitrate transport and its regulation by oxygen, the effects of various metabolic inhibitors on the uptake process and on oxygen regulation were investigated. Nitrate uptake was stimulated by the protonophores carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone and 2,4-dinitrophenol, indicating that nitrate uptake is not strictly energized by, but may be affected by the proton motive force. Oxygen regulation of nitrate uptake might in part be through redox-sensitive thiol groups since N-ethylmaleimide at high concentrations decreased the rate of nitrate transport. Cells grown with tungstate (deficient in nitrate reductase activity) and azide-treated cells transported nitrate at significantly lower rates than untreated cells, indicating that physiological rates of nitrate transport are dependent on nitrate reduction. Furthermore, tungstate grown cells transported nitrate only in the presence of nitrite, lending support to the nitrate/nitrite antiport model for transport. Oxygen regulation of nitrate transport was relieved (10% that of typical anaerobic rates) by the cytochrome oxygen reductase inhibitors carbon monoxide and cyanide.  相似文献   

11.
Escherichia coli cells grown anaerobically in the presence of nitrate reduce the nitrate as a terminal electron acceptor in place of molecular oxygen by an induced respiratory-type electron transferring system residing in the inner membrane structure. When oxygen is introduced to a suspension of nitrate-respiring cells, the oxygen is immediately reduced preferentially and the cellular uptake of nitrate ceases abruptly. In contrast, we found that the cells exhibited no oxygen control on uptake of chlorate, a competitive substrate analogue, indicating operation of an oxygen-sensitive transport system specific to nitrate. This was further evidenced by the fact that chlorate inhibition of reduction of nitrate was brought about only when the transport of both chlorate and nitrate was facilitated by the aid of carrier-type chlorate (or nitrate) ionophore. We demonstrated that oxygen inhibition on reduction of nitrate was abolished within the cells treated by octyl glucoside resulting in a removal of permeability barrier specific to nitrate. We conclude that the transient control by molecular oxygen is primarily due to the inhibition of nitrate transport into the cytoplasmic side. Since nitrate induces the nitrate-respiring system, the repression of the nitrate reductase operon by molecular oxygen is consistently interpreted on the basis of the "inducer exclusion mechanism."  相似文献   

12.
In vivo (31)P-NMR was used to investigate the basis for the inhibition of denitrification by nitrite accumulated endogenously by Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 17822 (biotype II) at pH 7.0. Cells were immobilized in kappa-carrageenan to obtain high cell concentrations in the NMR tube. Acetate and nitrate in two concentration ratios were supplied as electron donor and acceptor, respectively, to achieve different levels of nitrite accumulation. During denitrification, cells were able to maintain a pH gradient of approximately 0.4 to 0.5 units, but when nitrite accumulation reached values approximating 27 mM the transmembrane DeltapH collapsed sharply. Nitrite stimulated the reduction rate of nitrate; furthermore, at nitrite concentrations below 1 mM, activation of oxygen respiratory rates was observed in cells grown under aerobic conditions. The results provide evidence for nitrite acting as a protonophore (an uncoupler that increases the proton permeability of membranes by a shuttling mechanism). (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
The human gastrointestinal pathogen Campylobacter jejuni is a microaerophilic bacterium with a respiratory metabolism. The genome sequence of C. jejuni strain 11168 reveals the presence of genes that encode terminal reductases that are predicted to allow the use of a wide range of alternative electron acceptors to oxygen, including fumarate, nitrate, nitrite, and N- or S-oxides. All of these reductase activities were present in cells of strain 11168, and the molybdoenzyme encoded by Cj0264c was shown by mutagenesis to be responsible for both trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) reduction. Nevertheless, growth of C. jejuni under strictly anaerobic conditions (with hydrogen or formate as electron donor) in the presence of any of the electron acceptors tested was insignificant. However, when fumarate, nitrate, nitrite, TMAO, or DMSO was added to microaerobic cultures in which the rate of oxygen transfer was severely restricted, clear increases in both the growth rate and final cell density compared to what was seen with the control were obtained, indicative of electron acceptor-dependent energy conservation. The C. jejuni genome encodes a single class I-type ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) which requires oxygen to generate a tyrosyl radical for catalysis. Electron microscopy of cells that had been incubated under strictly anaerobic conditions with an electron acceptor showed filamentation due to an inhibition of cell division similar to that induced by the RNR inhibitor hydroxyurea. An oxygen requirement for DNA synthesis can thus explain the lack of anaerobic growth of C. jejuni. The results indicate that strict anaerobiosis is a stress condition for C. jejuni but that alternative respiratory pathways can contribute significantly to energy conservation under oxygen-limited conditions, as might be found in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
Two related polytopic membrane proteins of the major facilitator family, NarK and NarU, catalyse nitrate uptake, nitrite export and nitrite uptake across the Escherichia coli cytoplasmic membrane by an unknown mechanism. A 12-helix model of NarU was constructed based upon six alkaline phosphatase and beta-galactosidase fusions to NarK and the predicted hydropathy for the NarK family. Fifteen residues conserved in the NarK-NarU protein family were substituted by site-directed mutagenesis, including four residues that are essential for nitrate uptake by Aspergillus nidulans: arginines Arg(87) and Arg(303) in helices 2 and 8, and two glycines in a nitrate signature motif. Despite the wide range of substitutions studied, in no case did mutation result in loss of one biochemical function without simultaneous loss of all other functions. A NarU+ NirC+ strain grew more rapidly and accumulated nitrite more rapidly than the isogenic NarU+ NirC(-) strain. Only the NirC+ strain consumed nitrite rapidly during the later stages of growth. Under conditions in which the rate of nitrite reduction was limited by the rate of nitrite uptake, NirC+ strains reduced nitrite up to 10 times more rapidly than isogenic NarU+ strains, indicating that both nitrite efflux and nitrite uptake are largely dependent on NirC. Isotope tracer experiments with [15N]nitrate and [14N]nitrite revealed that [15N]nitrite accumulated in the extracellular medium even when there was a net rate of nitrite uptake and reduction. We propose that NarU functions as a single channel for nitrate uptake and nitrite expulsion, either as a nitrate-nitrite antiporter, or more likely as a nitrate/H+ or nitrite/H+ channel.  相似文献   

15.
Recent results suggest that the presence of common nitrogen salts (sodium nitrite and nitrate) in the irradiation medium can markedly protect filamentous blue green algae from potentially lethal ultraviolet light irradiation. Our results as well as general biological arguments as presented by Egami (above) support and extend Egami's original view that anaerobic respiratory pathways using nitrite and nitrate as terminal electron acceptors evolved prior to oxygen requiring aerobic respiratory pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Bradyrhizobium japonicum cytochrome c(550), encoded by cycA, has been previously suggested to play a role in denitrification, the respiratory reduction of nitrate to dinitrogen. However, the exact role of this cytochrome in the denitrification process is unknown. This study shows that cytochrome c(550) is involved in electron transfer to the copper-containing nitrite reductase of B. japonicum, as revealed by the inability of a cycA mutant strain to consume nitrite and, consequently, to grow under denitrifying conditions with nitrite as the electron acceptor. Mutation of cycA had no apparent effect on methylviologen-dependent nitrite reductase activity. However, succinate-dependent nitrite reduction was largely inhibited, suggesting that c(550) is the in vivo electron donor to copper-containing nitrite reductase. In addition, this study demonstrates that a cytochrome c(550) mutation has a negative effect on expression of the periplasmic nitrate reductase. This phenotype can be rescued by extending the growth period of the cells. A model is proposed whereby a mutation in cycA reduces expression of the cbb(3)-type oxidase, affecting oxygen consumption rate by the cells and consequently preventing maximal expression of the periplasmic nitrate reductase during the first days of the growth period.  相似文献   

17.
Thauera selenatis grows anaerobically with selenate, nitrate or nitrite as the terminal electron acceptor; use of selenite as an electron acceptor does not support growth. When grown with selenate, the product was selenite; very little of the selenite was further reduced to elemental selenium. When grown in the presence of both selenate and nitrate both electron acceptors were reduced concomitantly; selenite formed during selenate respiration was further reduced to elemental selenium. Mutants lacking the periplasmic nitrite reductase activity were unable to reduce either nitrite or selenite. Mutants possessing higher activity of nitrite reductase than the wild-type, reduced nitrite and selenite more rapidly than the wild-type. Apparently, the nitrite reductase (or a component of the nitrite respiratory system) is involved in catalyzing the reduction of selenite to elemental selenium while also reducing nitrite. While periplasmic cytochrome C 551 may be a component of the nitrite respiratory system, the level of this cytochrome was essentially the same in mutant and wild-type cells grown under two different growth conditions (i.e. with either selenate or selenate plus nitrate as the terminal electron acceptors). The ability of certain other denitrifying and nitrate respiring bacteria to reduce selenite will also be described.  相似文献   

18.
Extracts ofEscherichia coli, harvested from aerobic, anaerobic, or oxygen-limited cultures, reduced Fe(III) citrate with NADH or NADPH as reductants. The activity was predominantly soluble, not membrane bound. Cytochromes and quinones were shown, by the use of respiration-deficient mutants, not to be involved in electron transfer to Fe(III). Neither nitrate nor nitrite, alternative electron acceptors from the respiratory chain, directly inhibited Fe(III) reduction, but in anaerobic cultures containing nitrate and high Fe(III) concentrations, no Fe(II) accumulated; this was attributed to the reoxidation of Fe(II) by nitrite, the product of nitrate reduction. The pathway(s) of electron transport to the metal ion, the observed stimulation of Fe(III) reduction by ATP and cyanide, and the possible physiological significance of the reaction are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Intact cells obtained from Thiobacillus denitrificans grown autotrophically with thiosulfate as the oxidizable substrate and nitrate as the final electron acceptor catalyzed the reduction of nitrate, nitrite and nitric oxide stoichiometrically to nitrogen gas with the concomitant oxidation of thiosulfate. In addition, nitrous oxide was also capable of acting as the terminal oxidant of the respiratory chain with thiosulfate as the reductant. The anaerobic oxidation of thiosulfate by NO3 -, NO, and N2O was sensitive to the flavoprotein inhibitors, antimycin A or NHQNO, and cyanide or azide thus, implicating the participation of flavins, and cytochromes of b-, c-, and a-types in the denitrification process. The nitrite reductase system, however, was not markedly affected by the electron transport chain inhibitors. The experimental observations suggest that the dissimilatory nitrate reduction in the chemoautotroph T. denitrificans involves nitrite, nitric oxide, and nitrous oxide as theintermediates with nitrogen gas as the final reduction product.Non-Standard Abbreviations TTFA Thenoyltrifluoroacetone - NHQNO 2-n-nonyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide  相似文献   

20.
Campylobacter sputorum subspecies bubulus was grown in continuous culture with excess of l-lactate or formate, and growth-limiting amounts of oxygen, fumarate, nitrate or nitrite. l-Lactate was oxidized to acetate, fumarate was reduced to succinate, and nitrate and nitrite were reduced to ammonia. The Y lactate values (g dry weight bacteria/g mol lactate) for the respective hydrogen acceptors were much higher than the Y formate values. Steady state cultures on formate and nitrite could only be obtained at a low dilution rate and low nitrite concentrations in the growth medium. In H+/2e measurements with lactate-grown cells proton ejections were observed with lactate or pyruvate as a hydrogen donor, and oxygen or hydrogen peroxide as a hydrogen acceptor. Proton ejection was also observed with pyruvate and nitrate. Proton ejection did not occur with lactate and nitrate, neither with lactate or pyruvate and fumarate or nitrite. With formate as a hydrogen donor acidification occurred with all hydrogen acceptors mentioned. It has been concluded that during growth on lactate and fumarate or nitrite substrate level phosphorylation at acetate formation is the sole ATP-generating system. Growth on formate and fumarate or nitrite is explained by a proton gradient generated as a result of oxidation of formate at the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane. With oxygen and nitrate additional ATP is formed by electron transport-linked phosphorylation. The low molar growth yields with formate are explained by the observation that formate-grown cells had a great permeability to protons.Abbreviations H+/2e value number of protons ejected per electron pair transported in the respiratory system - P/2e value mol of ATP formed per electron pair transported in the respiratory system - CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenyl-hydrazone  相似文献   

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