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1.
Sulfur isotope (34S/32S) fractionation during reduction of dissolved sulfate was investigated with a growing batch culture of a thermophilic, gram-negative, sulfate-reducing bacterium (strain MT-96) at 60 °C. The completely oxidizing strain was isolated from geothermally heated sediments of a shallow-water hydrothermal vent in the Mediterranean Sea. The hydrogen sulfide produced in the experiments was enriched in 32S by approximately 19‰ as compared to sulfate, which indicates that stable isotope discrimination by this thermophile is within the range found previously for mesophilic sulfate-reducing bacteria, and only slightly higher than that observed for the thermophilic gram-positive Desulfotomaculum nigrificans. Received: 1 December 1998 / Accepted: 25 May 1999  相似文献   

2.
The capability of Phascolosoma arcuatum to detoxify sulfide in anaerobic conditions was examined. Sulfane sulfur, which underwent cold cyanolysis, was the major excretory end product of sulfide detoxification during anoxia. Thiosulfate was not excreted into the external medium. Instead, it was absorbed by P. arcuatum and its absorption was stimulated by the presence of sodium sulfide (Na2S) in the incubation medium. The effective formation and excretion of sulfane sulfur by P.␣arcuatum required the presence of both Na2S and sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3). Results obtained indicate that rhodanese might be involved in sulfide detoxification in this sipunculid. Rhodanese could act as a catalyst in the transfer of sulfur atoms from thiosulfate to HS. The body wall and the introvert were the main sites of sulfide detoxification. However, it is unlikely that epibiotic bacteria associated with the outside surface of the worm were involved in the detoxification process. A time-course study on the contents of thiosulfate and sulfane sulfur in the body wall of P. arcuatum incubated anaerobically in the presence of Na2S + Na2S2O3 verified that thiosulfate absorbed was utilized to detoxify sulfide to sulfane sulfur. Accepted: 24 October 1996  相似文献   

3.
Stable sulfur isotope fractionation was investigated during reduction of thiosulfate by growing batch cultures of Dethiosulfovibrio russensis at a cell-specific reduction rate of 2.4 +/- 0.72 fmol cell(-1) d(-1) (28 degrees C). Citrate was used as carbon and energy source. The hydrogen sulfide produced by this sulfur- and thiosulfate-reducing bacterium was depleted in 34S by 11% compared to total thiosulfate sulfur, in agreement with previous results observed for sulfate-reducing bacteria. This indicates the operation of a similar pathway for thiosulfate reduction in these phylogenetically different bacteria.  相似文献   

4.
M. I. H. Aleem 《Plant and Soil》1975,43(1-3):587-607
Summary Aspects of the biochemistry of the oxidation of inorganic sulfur compounds are discussed in thiobacilli but chiefly inThiobacillus denitrificans. Almost all of the thiobacilli (e.g. T. denitrificans, T. neapolitanus, T. novellus, andThiobacillus A 2) were capable of producing approximately 7.5 moles of sulfuric acid aerobically from 3.75 moles of thiosulfate per gram of cellular protein per hr. By far the most prolific producer of sulfuric acid (or sulfates) from the anaerobic thiosulfate oxidation with nitrates wasT. denitrificans which was capable of producing 15 moles of sulfates from 7.5 moles of thiosulfate with concomitant reduction of 12 moles of nitrate resulting in the evolution of 6 moles of nitrogen gas/g protein/hr. The oxidation of sulfide was mediated by the flavo-protein system and cytochromes ofb, c, o, anda-type. This process was sensitive to flavoprotein inhibitors, antimycin A, and cyanide. The aerobic thiosulfate oxidation on the other hand involved cytochromec : O2 oxidoreductase region of the electron transport chain and was sensitive to cyanide only. The anaerobic oxidation of thiosulfate byT. denitrificans, however, was severely inhibited by the flavoprotein inhibitors because of the splitting of the thiosulfate molecule into the sulfide and sulfite moieties produced by the thiosulfate-reductase. Accumulation of tetrathionate and to a small extent trithionate and pentathionate occurred during anaerobic growth ofT. denitrificans. These polythionates were subsequently oxidized to sulfate with the concomitant reduction of nitrate to N2. Intact cell suspensions catalyzed the complete oxidation of sulfide, thiosulfate, tetrathionate, and sulfite to sulfate with the stoichiometric reduction of nitrate, nitrite, nitric oxide, and nitrous oxide to nitrogen gas thus indicating that NO2 , NO, and N2O are the possible intermediates in the denitrification of nitrate. This process was mediated by the cytochrome electron transport chain and was sensitive to the electron transfer inhibitors. The oxidation of sulfite involved cytochrome-linked sulfite oxidase as well as the APS-reductase pathways. The latter was absent inT. novellus andThiobacillus A 2. In all of the thiobacilli the inner as well as the outer sulfur atoms of thiosulfate were oxidized at approximately the same rate by intact cells. The sulfide oxidation occurred in two stages: (a) a cellular-membrane-associated initial and rapid oxidation reaction which was dependent upon sulfide concentration, and (b) a slower oxidation reaction stage catalyzed by the cellfree extracts, probably involving polysulfides. InT. novellus andT. neapolitanus the oxidation of inorganic sulfur compounds is coupled to energy generation through oxidative phosphorylation, however, the reduction of pyridine nucleotides by sulfur compounds involved an energy-linked reversal of electron transfer. Paper read at the Symposium on the Sulphur Cycle, Wageningen, May 1974. Summary already inserted on p. 189 of the present volume.  相似文献   

5.
Xanthobacter tagetidis grew as a chemolithotrophic autotroph on thiosulfate and other inorganic sulfur compounds, as a heterotroph on thiophene-2-carboxylic acid, acetic acid and α-ketoglutaric acid, and as a mixotroph on thiosulfate in combination with thiophene-2-carboxylic acid and/or acetic acid. Autotrophic growth on one-carbon organosulfur compounds, and intermediates in their oxidation are also reported. Thiosulfate enhanced the growth yields in mixotrophic cultures, presumably by acting as a supplementary energy source, since ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase was only active in thiosulfate-grown cells and was not detected in mixotrophic cultures using thiosulfate with thiophene-2-carboxylic acid. Bacteria grown on thiophene-2-carboxylic acid also oxidized sulfide, thiosulfate and tetrathionate, indicating these as possible sulfur intermediates in thiophene-2-carboxylic acid degradation. Thiosulfate and tetrathionate were oxidized completely to sulfate and, consequently, did not accumulate as products of thiophene-2-carboxylic acid oxidation in growing cultures. K m and V max values for the oxidation of thiosulfate, tetrathionate or sulfide were 13 μM and 83 nmol O2 min–1 (mg dry wt.)–1, respectively; thiosulfate and tetrathionate became autoinhibitory at concentrations above 100 μM. The true growth yield (Ymax) on thiophene-2-carboxylic acid was estimated from chemostat cultures (at dilution rates of 0.034–0.094 h–1) to be 112.2 g mol–1, with a maintenance coefficient (m) of 0.3 mmol thiophene-2-carboxylic acid (g dry wt.)–1 h–1, and the maximum specific growth rate (μmax) was 0.116 h–1. Growth in chemostat culture at a dilution rate of 0.041 h–1 indicated growth yields [g dry wt. (mol substrate)–1] of 8.1 g (mol thiosulfate)–1, 60.9 g (mol thiophene-2-carboxylic acid)–1, and 17.5 g (mol acetic acid)–1, with additive yields for growth on mixtures of these substrates. At a dilution rate of 0.034 h–1, yields of 57.8 g (mol α-ketoglutaric acid)–1 and 60.7 g (mol thiophene-2-carboxylic acid)–1 indicated some additional energy conservation from oxidation of the thiophene-sulfur. SDS-PAGE of cell-free preparations indicated a polypeptide (M r, 21.0 kDa) specific to growth on thiophene-2-carboxylic acid for which no function can yet be ascribed: no metabolism of thiophene-2-carboxylic acid by cell-free extracts was detected. It was shown that X. tagetidis exhibits a remarkable degree of metabolic versatility and is representative of facultatively methylotrophic and chemolithotrophic autotrophs that contribute significantly to the turnover of simple inorganic and organic sulfur compounds (including substituted thiophenes) in the natural environment. Received: 1 July 1997 / Accepted: 3 November 1997  相似文献   

6.
7.
In an investigation on the oxygen tolerance of sulfate-reducing bacteria, a strain was isolated from a 107-fold dilution of the upper 3-mm layer of a hypersaline cyanobacterial mat (transferred from Solar Lake, Sinai). The isolate, designated P1B, appeared to be well-adapted to the varying concentrations of oxygen and sulfide that occur in this environment. In the presence of oxygen strain P1B respired aerobically with the highest rates [260 nmol O2 min–1 (mg protein)–1] found so far among marine sulfate-reducing bacteria. Besides H2 and lactate, even sulfide or sulfite could be oxidized with oxygen. The sulfur compounds were completely oxidized to sulfate. Under anoxic conditions, it grew with sulfate, sulfite, or thiosulfate as the electron acceptor using H2, lactate, pyruvate, ethanol, propanol, or butanol as the electron donor. Furthermore, in the absence of electron donors the isolate grew by disproportionation of sulfite or thiosulfate to sulfate and sulfide. The highest respiration rates with oxygen were obtained with H2 at low oxygen concentrations. Aerobic growth of homogeneous suspensions was not obtained. Additions of 1% oxygen to the gas phase of a continuous culture resulted in the formation of cell clumps wherein the cells remained viable for at least 200 h. It is concluded that strain P1B is oxygen-tolerant but does not carry out sulfate reduction in the presence of oxygen under the conditions tested. Analysis of the 16S rDNA sequence indicated that strain P1B belongs to the genus Desulfovibrio, with Desulfovibrio halophilus as its closest relative. Based on physiological properties strain P1B could not be assigned to this species. Therefore, a new species, Desulfovibrio oxyclinae, is proposed. Received: 7 August 1996 / Accepted: 29 January 1997  相似文献   

8.
Natural 15N abundance values were measured in needles, twigs, wood, soil, bulk precipitation, throughfall and soil water in a Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) and a Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) stand receiving high loads of nitrogen in throughfall (>50 kg N ha−1 year−1). In the Douglas fir stand δ15N values of the vegetation ranged between −5.7 and −4.2‰ with little variation between different compartments. The vegetation of the Scots pine stand was less depleted in 15N and varied from −3.3 to −1.2‰δ15N. At both sites δ15N values increased with soil depth, from −5.7‰ and −1.2‰ in the organic layer to +4.1‰ and +4.7‰ at 70 cm soil depth in the Douglas fir and Scots pine stand, respectively. The δ15N values of inorganic nitrogen in bulk precipitation showed a seasonal variation with a mean in NH4 +-N of −0.6‰ at the Douglas fir stand and +10.8‰ at the Scots pine stand. In soil water below the organic layer NH4 +-N was enriched and NO3 -N depleted in 15N, which was interpreted as being caused by isotope fractionation accompanying high nitrification rates in the organic layers. Mean δ15N values of NH4 + and NO3 were very similar in the drainage water at 90 cm soil depth at both sites (−7.1 to −3.8‰). A dynamic N cycling model was used to test the sensitivity of the natural abundance values for the amount of N deposition, the 15N ratio of atmospheric N deposited and for the intrinsic isotope discrimination factors associated with N transformation processes. Simulated δ15N values for the N saturated ecosystems appeared particularly sensitive to the 15N ratio of atmospheric N inputs and discrimination factors during nitrification and mineralization. The N-saturated coniferous forest ecosystems studied were not characterized by elevated natural 15N abundance values. The results indicated that the natural 15N abundance values can only be used as indicators for the stage of nitrogen saturation of an ecosystem if the δ15N values of the deposited N and isotope fractionation factors are taken into consideration. Combining dynamic isotope models and natural 15N abundance values seems a promising technique for interpreting natural 15N abundance values found in these forest ecosystems. Received: 5 May 1996 / Accepted: 10 April 1997  相似文献   

9.
The lugworm Arenicola marina is a typical inhabitant of intertidal flats. In its L-shaped burrow the animal is exposed to varying concentrations of O2 and toxic sulfide depending on the tides. The lugworm is able to detoxify sulfide through its oxidation to thiosulfate. When exposed to declining O2 tensions Arenicola marina reacted as an oxyconformer. In the presence of 25 μmol · l−1 sulfide the respiration was not affected. In contrast, the lugworm consumed significantly less O2 at any Po2 in the presence of 200 μmol · l−1 sulfide. Without sulfide anaerobic metabolism started at a Po2 of approximatedly 10 kPa. Even at high O2 tensions animals exposed to sulfide produced significantly more anaerobic metabolites compared with the controls. Accordingly the critical value PcM, the ambient Po2 below which anaerobic metabolism starts, was shifted towards normoxia. Since O2 supply was sufficient for aerobic metabolism, anaerobiosis was induced by sulfide. An influx of sulfide was observed at 25 as well as at 200 μmol · l−1 sulfide. The main product of sulfide detoxification in the lugworm was thiosulfate. Its synthesis increased with ambient Po2 and depended on the sulfide concentration. Sulfide and thiosulfate were detected in the coelomic fluid, the blood, and the body wall of Arenicola marina. Only about 2% of the ambient O2 was used for sulfide detoxification at 25 μmol · l−1 sulfide and about 50% at 200 μmol · l−1 sulfide, respectively. Even at the low sulfide concentration Arenicola marina's capacity to detoxify sulfide was too low to maintain a complete aerobic metabolism. Accepted: 19 February 1997  相似文献   

10.
A new halotolerant Desulfovibrio, strain CVLT (T = type strain), was isolated from a solar saltern in California. The curved, gram-negative, nonsporeforming cells (0.3 × 1.0–1.3 μm) occurred singly, in pairs, or in chains, were motile by a single polar flagellum and tolerated up to 12.5% NaCl. Strain CVLT had a generation time of 60 min when grown in lactate-yeast extract medium under optimal conditions (37°C, pH 7.6, 2.5% NaCl). It used lactate, pyruvate, cysteine, or H2/CO2 + acetate as electron donors, and sulfate, sulfite, thiosulfate, or fumarate as electron acceptors. Elemental sulfur, nitrate, or oxygen were not used. Sulfite and thiosulfate were disproportionated to sulfate and sulfide. The G+C content of the DNA was 62 mol%. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that Desulfovibrio fructosovorans was the nearest relative. Strain CVLT is clearly different from other Desulfovibrio species, and is designated Desulfovibrio senezii sp. nov. (DSM 8436). Received: 27 February 1998 / Accepted: 15 June 1998  相似文献   

11.
Foliar δ15N, %N and %P in the dominant woody and herbaceous species across nutrient gradients in New Zealand restiad (family Restionaceae) raised bogs revealed marked differences in plant δ15N correlations with P. The two heath shrubs, Leptospermum scoparium (Myrtaceae) and Dracophyllum scoparium (Epacridaceae), showed considerable isotopic variation (−2.03 to −15.55‰, and −0.39 to −12.06‰, respectively) across the bogs, with foliar δ15N strongly and positively correlated with P concentrations in foliage and peat, and negatively correlated with foliar N:P ratios. For L. scoparium, the isotopic gradient was not linked to ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fractionation as ECMs occurred only on higher nutrient marginal peats where 15N depletion was least. In strong contrast, restiad species (Empodisma minus Sporadanthus ferrugineus, S. traversii) showed little isotopic variation across the same nutrient gradients. Empodisma minus and S. traversii had δ15N levels consistently around 0‰ (means of −0.12‰ and +0.15‰ respectively), and S. ferrugineus, which co-habited with E. minus, was more depleted (mean −4.97‰). The isotopic differences between heath shrubs and restiads were similar in floristically dissimilar bogs and may be linked to contrasting nutrient demands, acquisition mechanisms, and root morphology. Leptospermum scoparium shrubs on low nutrient peats were stunted, with low tissue P concentrations, and high N:P ratios, suggesting they were P-limited, which was probably exacerbated by markedly reduced mycorrhizal colonisations. The coupling of δ15N depletion and %P in heath shrubs suggests that N fractionation is promoted by P limitation. In contrast, the constancy in δ15N of the restiad species through the N and P gradients suggests that these are not suffering from P limitation.  相似文献   

12.
Several lichens and the terrestrial alga Trentepohlia were found to have extremely depleted 15N signatures at two sites near the Rotorua geothermal area, New Zealand. Values, typically −20‰, with several extreme cases of −24‰, are more isotopically depleted than any previously quoted δ15N signature for vegetation growing in natural environments. For Trentepohlia, distance from a geothermal source did not affect isotopic signature. A 100-km transect showed that the phenomenon is widespread and the discrimination is not related to substrate N, or to elevation. Rainfall NHx and atmospheric gaseous NH3 (NH3(g)) were shown to be isotopically depleted in the range −1‰ to −8‰ and could not, of themselves, be responsible for the plant values obtained. A simulation of Trentepohlia thallus was created using an acidified fiberglass mat and was allowed to absorb NH3(g) from the atmosphere. Mats exposed at the geothermal sites and on farmland showed a significant further depletion of 15N to −17‰. We hypothesize that the extreme isotopic depletion is due to dual fractionation: firstly by the volatilization of NH3(g) from aqueous sources into the atmosphere; secondly by the diffusive assimilation of that NH3(g) into vegetation. We further hypothesize that lithophytes, epiphytes, and higher plants, growing on strongly N-limited substrates, will show this phenomenon more or less, depending on the proportion of diffusively assimilated NH3(g) utilized as a N source. Many of the isotopically depleted δ15N signatures in vegetation, previously reported in the literature, especially epiphytes, may be due to this form of uptake depending on the concentration of atmospheric NH3(g), and the degree of reliance on that form of N.  相似文献   

13.
The extent of fractionation of sulfur isotopes by sulfate‐reducing microbes is dictated by genomic and environmental factors. A greater understanding of species‐specific fractionations may better inform interpretation of sulfur isotopes preserved in the rock record. To examine whether gene diversity influences net isotopic fractionation in situ, we assessed environmental chemistry, sulfate reduction rates, diversity of putative sulfur‐metabolizing organisms by 16S rRNA and dissimilatory sulfite reductase (dsrB) gene amplicon sequencing, and net fractionation of sulfur isotopes along a sediment transect of a hypersaline Arctic spring. In situ sulfate reduction rates yielded minimum cell‐specific sulfate reduction rates < 0.3 × 10?15 moles cell?1 day?1. Neither 16S rRNA nor dsrB diversity indices correlated with relatively constant (38‰–45‰) net isotope fractionation (ε34Ssulfide‐sulfate). Measured ε34S values could be reproduced in a mechanistic fractionation model if 1%–2% of the microbial community (10%–60% of Deltaproteobacteria) were engaged in sulfate respiration, indicating heterogeneous respiratory activity within sulfate‐reducing populations. This model indicated enzymatic kinetic diversity of Apr was more likely to correlate with sulfur fractionation than DsrB. We propose that, above a threshold Shannon diversity value of 0.8 for dsrB, the influence of the specific composition of the microbial community responsible for generating an isotope signal is overprinted by the control exerted by environmental variables on microbial physiology.  相似文献   

14.
Bromate (BrO3 ) is a carcinogenic contaminant formed during ozonation of waters that contain trace amounts of bromide. Previous research shows that bromate can be microbially reduced to bromide using organic (i.e. acetate, glucose, ethanol) and inorganic (H2) electron-donating substrates. In this study, the reduction of bromate by a mixed microbial culture was investigated using elemental sulfur (S0) as an electron donor. In batch bioassays performed at 30°C, bromate (0.30 mM) was completely converted to bromide after 10 days and no accumulation of intermediates occurred. Bromate was also reduced in cultures supplemented with thiosulfate and hydrogen sulfide as electron donor. Our results demonstrated that S0-disproportionating microorganisms were responsible for the reduction of bromate in cultures spiked with S0 through an indirect mechanism involving microbial formation of sulfide and subsequent abiotic reduction of bromate by the biogenic sulfide. Confirmation of this mechanism is the fact that bromate was shown to undergo rapid chemical reduction by sulfide (but not S0 or thiosulfate) in abiotic experiments. Bromate concentrations above 0.30 mM inhibited sulfide formation by S0-disproportionating bacteria, leading to a decrease in the rate of bromate reduction. The results suggest that biological formation of sulfide from by S0 disproportionation could support the chemical removal of bromate without having to directly use sulfide as a reagent.  相似文献   

15.
Concentrations and natural isotope abundance of total sulfur and nitrogen as well as sulfate and nitrate concentrations were measured in needles of different age classes and in soil samples of different horizons from a healthy and a declining Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) forest in the Fichtelgebirge (NE Bavaria, Germany), in order to study the fate of atmospheric depositions of sulfur and nitrogen compounds. The mean δ15N of the needles ranged between −3.7 and −2.1 ‰ and for δ34S a range between −0.4 and +0.9 ‰ was observed. δ34S and sulfur concentrations in the needles of both stands increased continuously with needle age and thus, were closely correlated. The δ15N values of the needles showed an initial decrease followed by an increase with needle age. The healthy stand showed more negative δ15N values in old needles than the declining stand. Nitrogen concentrations decreased with needle age. For soil samples at both sites the mean δ15N and δ34S values increased from −3 ‰ (δ15N) or +0.9 ‰ (δ34S) in the uppermost organic layer to about +4 ‰ (δ15N) or +4.5 ‰ (δ34S) in the mineral soil. This depth-dependent increase in abundance of 15N and 34S was accompanied by a decrease in total nitrogen and sulfur concentrations in the soil. δ15N values and nitrogen concentrations were closely correlated (slope −0.0061 ‰ δ15N per μmol eq N gdw −1), and δ34S values were linearly correlated with sulfur concentrations (slope −0.0576 ‰ δ34S per μmol eq S gdw −1). It follows that in the same soil samples sulfur concentrations were linearly correlated with the nitrogen concentrations (slope 0.0527), and δ34S values were linearly correlated with δ15N values (slope 0.459). A correlation of the sulfur and nitrogen isotope abundances on a Δ basis (which considers the different relative frequencies of 15N and 34S), however, revealed an isotope fractionation that was higher by a factor of 5 for sulfur than for nitrogen (slope 5.292). These correlations indicate a long term synchronous mineralization of organic nitrogen and sulfur compounds in the soil accompanied by element-specific isotope fractionations. Based on different sulfur isotope abundance of the soil (δ34S=0.9 ‰ for total sulfur of the organic layer was assumed to be equivalent to about −1.0 ‰ for soil sulfate) and of the atmospheric SO2 deposition (δ34S=2.0 ‰ at the healthy site and 2.3 ‰ at the declining site) the contribution of atmospheric SO2 to total sulfur of the needles was estimated. This contribution increased from about 20 % in current-year needles to more than 50 % in 3-year-old needles. The proportion of sulfur from atmospheric deposition was equivalent to the age dependent sulfate accumulation in the needles. In contrast to the accumulation of atmospheric sulfur compounds nitrogen compounds from atmospheric deposition were metabolized and were used for growth. The implications of both responses to atmospheric deposition are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Cultures of Chromatium vinosum, devoid of sulfur globules, were supplemented with sulfide and incubated under anoxic conditions in the light. The concentrations of sulfide, polysulfides, thiosulfate, polythionates and elemental sulfur (sulfur rings) were monitored for 3 days by ion-chromatography and reversed-phase HPLC. While sulfide disappeared rapidly, thiosulfate and elemental sulfur (S6, S7 S8 rings) were formed. After sulfide depletion, the concentration of thiosulfate decreased fairly rapidly, but elemental sulfur was oxidized very slowly to sulfate. Neither polysulfides (S x 2– ), polythionates (SnO 6 2– , n=4–6), nor other polysulfur compounds could be detected, which is in accordance with the fact that sulfide-grown cells were able to oxidize polysulfide without lag. The nature of the intracellular sulfur globules is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Deenergized cells of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans strain Essex 6 formed trithionate and thiosulfate during reduction of sulfite with H2 or formate. The required conditions were pretreatment with the uncoupler carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), low concentration of the electron donor H2 or formate (25–200 M) and the presence of sulfite in excess (>250 M). The cells formed up to 20 M thiosulfate, and variable amounts of trithionate (0–9 M) and sulfide (0–62 M). Tetrathionate was not produced. Sulfate could not replace sulfite in these experiments, as deenergized cells cannot activate sulfate. However, up to 5 M thiosulfate was produced by cells growing with H2 and excess sulfate in a chemostat. Micromolar concentrations of trithionate were incompletely reduced to thiosulfate and sulfide by washed cells in the presence of CCCP. Millimolar trithionate concentrations blocked the formation of sulfide, even in the absence of CCCP, and caused thiosulfate accumulation; sulfide formation from sulfate, sulfite or thiosulfate was stopped, too. Trithionate reduction with H2 in the presence of thiocyanate was coupled to respiration-driven proton translocation (extrapolated H+/H2 ratios of 1.5±0.6). Up to 150 M trithionate was formed by washed cells during oxidation of sulfite plus thiosulfate with ferricyanide as electron acceptor (reversed trithionate reductase activity). Cell breakage resulted in drastic decrease of sulfide formation. Cell-free extract reduced sulfite incompletely to trithionate, thiosulfate, and sulfide. Thiosulfate was reduced stoichiometrically to sulfite and sulfide (thiosulfate reductase activity). The formation of sulfide from sulfite, thiosulfate or trithionate by cell-free extract was blocked by methyl viologen, leading to increased production of thiosulfate plus trithionate from sulfite, or increased thiosulfate formation from trithionate. Our study demonstrates for the first time the formation of intermediates during sulfite reduction with whole cells of a sulfate-reducing bacterium oxidizing physiological electron donors. All results are in accordance with the trithionate pathway of sulfite reduction.With gratitude dedicated to Prof. Dr. Norbert Pfennig on occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

18.
Fractionation of stable carbon isotopes 12C and 13C by three pure cultures of photoautotrophic purple sulfur bacteria (Ectothiorhodospira shaposhnikovii, Lamprocystis purpureus, and Thiocapsa sp.) (PSB) and the green sulfur bacterium Prosthecochloris sp. (GSB) was investigated in 13–15-day experiments. The cultivation was carried out in a luminostat (2000 lx) on mineral media with 1–1.5 g/l NaHCO3 (inoculum) with the subsequent transfer to the medium with up to 10 g/l NaHCO3. For PSB, the difference in the quantitative characteristics of the isotopic composition of suspended carbon (including bacterial cells) and mineral carbon of the medium (Δ13C = δ13Csubstrate − δ13Cbiomass) changed from 15.0 to 34.3‰. For GSB, the range of Δ13C changes was significantly less (18.3–22.7‰). These data suggested the possibility of a pool of soluble mineral carbon in PSB cells. The pool of intracellular mineral carbon was calculated; depending on the PSB species and growth stage, it varied from 0 to 68% of the total cell carbon. The α coefficients reflecting the carbon isotope fractionation by PSB and GBS and calculated from the changes of the bicarbonate carbon isotopic composition in the medium depending on its consumption were 1.029 ± 0.003 and 1.019 ± 0.001, respectively. These α values did not depend on the growth rate. CO2 fixation on ribulose-bisphosphate was shown to be the major factor determining the carbon isotope fractionation by PSB; at the stage of CO2 penetration into the cell, fractionation was insignificant. In GSB, fractionation occurred mostly at CO2 penetration into the cell, while it was insignificant at the stage of carbon dioxide fixation in the reverse TCA cycle. Analysis of the isotopic data of the photosynthesis by PSB and GSB in meromictic lakes also revealed that in PSB-dominated natural communities suspended organic matter was more enriched with light 13C (Δ13C = 23.4−24.6‰) than in the communities with more active GSB (Δ13C = 10.2−14.0‰)  相似文献   

19.
All of fourteen sulfate-reducing bacteria tested were able to carry out aerobic respiration with at least one of the following electron donors: H2, lactate, pyruvate, formate, acetate, butyrate, ethanol, sulfide, thiosulfate, sulfite. Generally, we did not obtain growth with O2 as electron acceptor. The bacteria were microaerophilic, since the respiration rates increased with decreasing O2 concentrations or ceased after repeated O2 additions. The amounts of O2 consumed indicated that the organic substrates were oxidized incompletely to acetate; only Desulfobacter postgatei oxidized acetate with O2 completely to CO2. Many of the strains oxidized sulfite (completely to sulfate) or sulfide (incompletely, except Desulfobulbus propionicus); thiosulfate was oxidized only by strains of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans; trithionate and tetrathionate were not oxidized by any of the strains. With Desulfovibrio desulfuricans CSN and Desulfobulbus propionicus the oxidation of inorganic sulfur compounds was characterized in detail. D. desulfuricans formed sulfate during oxidation of sulfite, thiosulfate or elemental sulfur prepared from polysulfide. D. propionicus oxidized sulfite and sulfide to sulfate, and elemental sulfur mainly to thiosulfate. A novel pathway that couples the sulfur and nitrogen cycles was detected: D. desulfuricans and (only with nitrite) D. propionicus were able to completely oxidize sulfide coupled to the reduction of nitrate or nitrite to ammonia. Cell-free extracts of both strains did not oxidize sulfide or thiosulfate, but formed ATP during oxidation of sulfite (37 nmol per 100 nmol sulfite). This, and the effects of AMP, pyrophosphate and molybdate on sulfite oxidation, suggested that sulfate is formed via the (reversed) sulfate activation pathway (involving APS reductase and ATP sulfurylase). Thiosulfate oxidation with O2 probably required a reductive first step, since it was obtained only with energized intact cells.Abbreviations CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - APS adenosine phosphosulfate or adenylyl sulfate  相似文献   

20.
Stable isotope ratios of sulfur (34S/32S), carbon (13C/12C), and nitrogen (15N/14N) were analyzed in the soft tissues of 12 common species of fish from the near-shore waters of the Peter the Great Bay in the Sea of Japan. The average δ13C values of individual species varied from −20.7‰ for planktivorous fish to −16.8‰ for benthivorous fish, reflecting the growing relative contribution of benthic primary producers to fish nutrition. The majority of the various species representatives studied can be assigned to one trophic level, as indicated by their narrow range of δ15N values (9.9 to 12.6‰). Large interspecific variations were found in the sulfur stable isotope ratios of fish (the mean δ34S values ranged from 11.2 to 19.5‰). This is the result of the different contributions to fish nutrition of infaunal invertebrates that are depleted in 34S due to the microbial food chain of the bottom sediments.  相似文献   

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