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1.
At Chocolate Pots Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park the source waters have a pH near neutral, contain high concentrations of reduced iron, and lack sulfide. An iron formation that is associated with cyanobacterial mats is actively deposited. The uptake of [14C]bicarbonate was used to assess the impact of ferrous iron on photosynthesis in this environment. Photoautotrophy in some of the mats was stimulated by ferrous iron (1.0 mM). Microelectrodes were used to determine the impact of photosynthetic activity on the oxygen content and the pH in the mat and sediment microenvironments. Photosynthesis increased the oxygen concentration to 200% of air saturation levels in the top millimeter of the mats. The oxygen concentration decreased with depth and in the dark. Light-dependent increases in pH were observed. The penetration of light in the mats and in the sediments was determined. Visible radiation was rapidly attenuated in the top 2 mm of the iron-rich mats. Near-infrared radiation penetrated deeper. Iron was totally oxidized in the top few millimeters, but reduced iron was detected at greater depths. By increasing the pH and the oxygen concentration in the surface sediments, the cyanobacteria could potentially increase the rate of iron oxidation in situ. This high-iron-content hot spring provides a suitable model for studying the interactions of microbial photosynthesis and iron deposition and the role of photosynthesis in microbial iron cycling. This model may help clarify the potential role of photosynthesis in the deposition of Precambrian banded iron formations.  相似文献   

2.
The role that neutrophilic iron-oxidizing bacteria play in the Arctic tundra is unknown. This study surveyed chemosynthetic iron-oxidizing communities at the North Slope of Alaska near Toolik Field Station (TFS) at Toolik Lake (lat 68.63, long −149.60). Microbial iron mats were common in submerged habitats with stationary or slowly flowing water, and their greatest areal extent is in coating plant stems and sediments in wet sedge meadows. Some Fe-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) produce easily recognized sheath or stalk morphotypes that were present and dominant in all the mats we observed. The cool water temperatures (9 to 11°C) and reduced pH (5.0 to 6.6) at all sites kinetically favor microbial iron oxidation. A microbial survey of five sites based on 16S rRNA genes found a predominance of Proteobacteria, with Betaproteobacteria and members of the family Comamonadaceae being the most prevalent operational taxonomic units (OTUs). In relative abundance, clades of lithotrophic FeOB composed 5 to 10% of the communities. OTUs related to cyanobacteria and chloroplasts accounted for 3 to 25% of the communities. Oxygen profiles showed evidence for oxygenic photosynthesis at the surface of some mats, indicating the coexistence of photosynthetic and FeOB populations. The relative abundance of OTUs belonging to putative Fe-reducing bacteria (FeRB) averaged around 11% in the sampled iron mats. Mats incubated anaerobically with 10 mM acetate rapidly initiated Fe reduction, indicating that active iron cycling is likely. The prevalence of iron mats on the tundra might impact the carbon cycle through lithoautotrophic chemosynthesis, anaerobic respiration of organic carbon coupled to iron reduction, and the suppression of methanogenesis, and it potentially influences phosphorus dynamics through the adsorption of phosphorus to iron oxides.  相似文献   

3.
In order to assess the role of cyanobacteria in the formation and dynamics of microenvironments in microbial mats, we studied an experimental biofilm of a benthic, halotolerant strain, belonging to the Halothece cluster of cyanobacteria. The 12-week-old biofilm developed in a sand core incubated in a benthic gradient chamber under opposing oxygen and sulfide vertical concentration gradients. At the biofilm surface, and as a response to high light irradiances, specific accumulation of myxoxanthophyll was detected in the cells, consistent with the typical vertical distribution of sun versus shade species in nature. The oxygen turn-over in terms of gross photosynthesis and net productivity rates was comparable to oxygen dynamics in natural microbial mats. Sulfide blocked O(2) production at low irradiances in deep biofilm layers but the dynamics of H(2)S and pH demonstrated that sulfide removal by anoxygenic photosynthesis was taking place. At higher irradiances, as soon as H(2)S was depleted, the cells switched to oxygenic photosynthesis as has been postulated for natural communities. The similarities between this experimental biofilm and natural benthic microbial mats demonstrate the central role of cyanobacteria in shaping microenvironmental gradients and processes in other complex microbial communities.  相似文献   

4.
Chocolate Pots Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park are high in ferrous iron, silica and bicarbonate. The springs are contributing to the active development of an iron formation. The microstructure of photosynthetic microbial mats in these springs was studied with conventional optical microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The dominant mats at the highest temperatures (48-54 degrees C) were composed of Synechococcus and Chloroflexus or Pseudanabaena and Mastigocladus. At lower temperatures (36-45 degrees C), a narrow Oscillatoria dominated olive green cyanobacterial mats covering most of the iron deposit. Vertically oriented cyanobacterial filaments were abundant in the top 0.5 mm of the mats. Mineral deposits accumulated beneath this surface layer. The filamentous microstructure and gliding motility may contribute to binding the iron minerals. These activities and heavy mineral encrustation of cyanobacteria may contribute to the growth of the iron deposit. Chocolate Pots Hot Springs provide a model for studying the potential role of photosynthetic prokaryotes in the origin of Precambrian iron formations.  相似文献   

5.
The dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) acquisition mechanisms were researched in intact microbial mats dominated by the cyanobacteria Microcoleus chthonoplastes Thuret, by determining the effect on photosynthesis of different inhibitors. The microbial mats exhibited high affinity for DIC at alkaline pH, with K(m(DIC)) values similar to the ones described for pure cultures of cyanobacteria and algae in which carbon concentrating mechanisms have been researched. Besides, the photosynthesis was non-sensitive to pH changes within the range of 5.6-9.6, indicating that HCO(3)(-) was the main DIC source used for photosynthesis. The M. chthonoplastes mats featured external and internal carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity as measured in intact cells and cell extracts, respectively. Acetazolamide (AZ, which slowly enters the cell and then inhibits mainly the external CA) and ethoxyzolamide (EZ, which inhibits both external and internal CA) reduced significantly the oxygen evolution rates, demonstrating that the CA was implied in the DIC acquisition. Vanadate inhibited photosynthesis by 60% although its application, when CA being inhibited (i.e. after applying AZ + EZ), did not produce any additional effect. It could indicate that ATPase-dependent HCO(3)(-) use occurred and also that this putative mechanism was coupled with CA-like activity at the plasma membrane. The involvement of Na(+)-dependent HCO(3)(-) transporters in DIC acquisition was also inferred as monensin and 4-4'-diisothiocyanatostibilene-2,2'-disulfonate (DIDS) reduced photosynthesis by 70%. DIDS produced a strong inhibitory effect even after application of AZ + EZ + vanadate, indicating that this mechanism was not related to CA activity. The microbial mats become subject to very unfavourable conditions for Rubisco carboxylation at their natural habitats (e.g. external pH of 10.5 and O(2) concentration doubled with respect to saturation concentration); therefore, this putative diversity of DIC acquisition mechanisms could ensure their growth under these extreme conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of oxygen concentration on photosynthesis and respiration in two hypersaline cyanobacterial mats were investigated. Experiments were carried out on mats from Eilat, Israel, with moderate photosynthetic activity, and mats from Mallorca, Spain, with high photosynthetic activity. The oxygen concentration in the overlying water above the mats was increased stepwise from 0% to 100% O2. Subsequent changes in oxygen concentration, gross photosynthetic rates, and pH values inside the mats were measured with microelectrodes. According to published reports on the regulation of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), the key enzyme in the CO2-fixation pathway of phototrophs, we expected photosynthetic activity to decrease with increasing oxygen concentration. Gross photosynthetic and total respiration rates in both mats were highest when the O2 concentration was at 0% in the overlying water. Net oxygen production rates under these conditions were the same as under air saturation (21% O2), while gross photosynthetic and respiration rates were lowest at air saturation. In both mats, gross photosynthetic and respiration rates increased upon gradually increasing the oxygen concentration in the overlying water from 21% to 100%. These results contradict the expectation that photosynthesis decreases with increasing oxygen concentration. Increased photosynthetic rates at oxygen concentrations above 21% were probably caused by enhanced oxidation of organic matter and concomitant CO2 production due to the increased oxygen availability. The cause of the high respiration rates at 0% O2 in the overlying water was presumably the enhanced excretion of photosynthetic products during increased photosynthesis. We conclude that the effect of the O2/CO2 concentration ratio on the activity of Rubisco as demonstrated in vitro on enzyme extracts cannot be extrapolated to the situation in intact microbial mats, because the close coupling of the activity of primary producers and heterotrophic bacteria plays a major role in this ecosystem.  相似文献   

7.
Rapid Assay for Microbially Reducible Ferric Iron in Aquatic Sediments   总被引:20,自引:12,他引:20       下载免费PDF全文
The availability of ferric iron for microbial reduction as directly determined by the activity of iron-reducing organisms was compared with its availability as determined by a newly developed chemical assay for microbially reducible iron. The chemical assay was based on the reduction of poorly crystalline ferric iron by hydroxylamine under acidic conditions. There was a strong correlation between the extent to which hydroxylamine could reduce various synthetic ferric iron forms and the susceptibility of the iron to microbial reduction in an enrichment culture of iron-reducing organisms. When sediments that contained hydroxylamine-reducible ferric iron were incubated under anaerobic conditions, ferrous iron accumulated as the concentration of hydroxylamine-reducible ferric iron declined over time. Ferrous iron production stopped as soon as the hydroxylamine-reducible ferric iron was depleted. In anaerobic incubations of reduced sediments that did not contain hydroxylamine-reducible ferric iron, there was no microbial iron reduction, even though the sediments contained high concentrations of oxalate-extractable ferric iron. A correspondence between the presence of hydroxylamine-reducible ferric iron and the extent of ferric iron reduction in anaerobic incubations was observed in sediments from an aquifer and in fresh- and brackish-water sediments from the Potomac River estuary. The assay is a significant improvement over previously described procedures for the determination of hydroxylamine-reducible ferric iron because it provides a correction for the high concentrations of solid ferrous iron which may also be extracted from sediments with acid. This is a rapid, simple technique to determine whether ferric iron is available for microbial reduction.  相似文献   

8.
For a large part of earth's history, cyanobacterial mats thrived in low‐oxygen conditions, yet our understanding of their ecological functioning is limited. Extant cyanobacterial mats provide windows into the putative functioning of ancient ecosystems, and they continue to mediate biogeochemical transformations and nutrient transport across the sediment–water interface in modern ecosystems. The structure and function of benthic mats are shaped by biogeochemical processes in underlying sediments. A modern cyanobacterial mat system in a submerged sinkhole of Lake Huron (LH) provides a unique opportunity to explore such sediment–mat interactions. In the Middle Island Sinkhole (MIS), seeping groundwater establishes a low‐oxygen, sulfidic environment in which a microbial mat dominated by Phormidium and Planktothrix that is capable of both anoxygenic and oxygenic photosynthesis, as well as chemosynthesis, thrives. We explored the coupled microbial community composition and biogeochemical functioning of organic‐rich, sulfidic sediments underlying the surface mat. Microbial communities were diverse and vertically stratified to 12 cm sediment depth. In contrast to previous studies, which used low‐throughput or shotgun metagenomic approaches, our high‐throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing approach revealed extensive diversity. This diversity was present within microbial groups, including putative sulfate‐reducing taxa of Deltaproteobacteria, some of which exhibited differential abundance patterns in the mats and with depth in the underlying sediments. The biological and geochemical conditions in the MIS were distinctly different from those in typical LH sediments of comparable depth. We found evidence for active cycling of sulfur, methane, and nutrients leading to high concentrations of sulfide, ammonium, and phosphorus in sediments underlying cyanobacterial mats. Indicators of nutrient availability were significantly related to MIS microbial community composition, while LH communities were also shaped by indicators of subsurface groundwater influence. These results show that interactions between the mats and sediments are crucial for sustaining this hot spot of biological diversity and biogeochemical cycling.  相似文献   

9.
Multiple environmental mechanisms have been proposed to control bottom water hypoxia (<2 mg O2 L?1) in the northern Gulf of Mexico Louisiana shelf. Near-bottom hypoxia has been attributed to a direct consumption of oxygen through benthic microbial respiration and a secondary chemical reaction between oxygen and reduced metabolites (i.e. ferrous iron and total sulfide) from these populations. No studies to date have examined the metabolically active microbial community structure in conjunction with the geochemical profile in these sediments. Temporal and spatial differences in dissolved and solid phase geochemistry were investigated in the upper 20 cm of the sediment column. Pyrosequencing of reverse transcribed small subunit (SSU) ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) was used to determine population distribution. Results indicated that populations shallower than 10 cm below surface were temporally variable yet uniform between sites, while below this depth, populations were more site-specific. This suggests a potential interaction between the water column and the benthic microbial population limited to a shallow depth. The presence of dissolved reduced iron in the upper sediment column was indicative of low oxygen concentration, yet sulfide was at or below detection limits. Putative sulfate and iron reducing and oxidizing populations were metabolically active at similar depths suggesting potential recycling of products. Results from this study indicate low carbon concentrations in the shallow sediments limit general metabolic activity, reducing the potential for microbial respiration. Supplemental materials are available for this article. Go to the publisher's online edition of Geomicrobiology Journal to view the supplemental file.  相似文献   

10.
The role of dissolved oxygen as a principal electron acceptor for microbial metabolism was investigated within Fe(III)‐oxide microbial mats that form in acidic geothermal springs of Yellowstone National Park (USA). Specific goals of the study were to measure and model dissolved oxygen profiles within high‐temperature (65–75°C) acidic (pH = 2.7–3.8) Fe(III)‐oxide microbial mats, and correlate the abundance of aerobic, iron‐oxidizing Metallosphaera yellowstonensis organisms and mRNA gene expression levels to Fe(II)‐oxidizing habitats shown to consume oxygen. In situ oxygen microprofiles were obtained perpendicular to the direction of convective flow across the aqueous phase/Fe(III)‐oxide microbial mat interface using oxygen microsensors. Dissolved oxygen concentrations dropped from ~ 50–60 μM in the bulk‐fluid/mat surface to below detection (< 0.3 μM) at a depth of ~ 700 μm (~ 10% of the total mat depth). Net areal oxygen fluxes into the microbial mats were estimated to range from 1.4–1.6 × 10?4 μmol cm?2 s?1. Dimensionless parameters were used to model dissolved oxygen profiles and establish that mass transfer rates limit the oxygen consumption. A zone of higher dissolved oxygen at the mat surface promotes Fe(III)‐oxide biomineralization, which was supported using molecular analysis of Metallosphaera yellowstonensis 16S rRNA gene copy numbers and mRNA expression of haem Cu oxidases (FoxA) associated with Fe(II)‐oxidation.  相似文献   

11.
余珂  张尹  吕雪艳  于志国 《生态学报》2021,41(24):9705-9716
硫、铁是泥炭沼泽湿地(泥炭地)中重要的生源要素,其参与下的生物地球化学过程对泥炭地碳循环意义重大。选取德国中部两处典型的雨养型泥炭地高海拔样点(TBP)和低海拔样点(TSP),通过原位采集泥炭剖面孔隙水和可溶性气体等,研究了硫、铁元素等地球化学变化规律,结合DOC、甲烷(CH4)和二氧化碳(CO2)浓度分布,探讨其对泥炭地碳排放的影响。研究结果表明:(1) TBP中总还原无机硫(TRIS)浓度随深度先增后减,且上部0-87 cm平均浓度远高于87 cm深度以下,上部硫酸盐还原作用强烈。结合上部亚铁、硫化氢(H2S)浓度分布,得知该范围内H2S主要是通过微生物硫酸盐还原作用(BSR)生成,同时H2S在孔隙水扩散过程中易与亚铁结合为硫化亚铁,进而生成稳定的黄铁矿,这一反应过程在约60 cm处减缓。(2) TBP、TSP两处采样点中DOC与亚铁、硫酸盐均有较强相关性,是由于地下水位的波动影响氧化还原程度以及微生物活性。两处采样点DOC均与亚铁呈显著正相关关系,表明铁氧化物在厌氧环境中被还原溶解产生亚铁,与其结合的有机碳被释放到溶液中从而导致DOC浓度的升高。TBP中DOC与硫酸盐呈显著负相关关系,表明硫酸盐作为电子受体被还原的过程中消耗酸度使pH值升高,增强了其中微生物的活性,DOC浓度由此增加。(3) CH4与硫酸盐、TRIS浓度在剖面上均呈现相反变化趋势,表明硫酸盐输入的增加以及硫酸盐还原活动均会抑制CH4生成。CO2/CH4均大于4,表明硫酸盐作为替代电子受体会使厌氧条件下碳矿化转向多CO2和少CH4生成。此外,亚铁对于CH4生成一定程度上会起到低促高抑的效果,而对于CO2的生成的影响较弱。表明硫酸盐对于CH4和CO2生成的影响高于亚铁。研究着重探究硫、铁等关键元素地下部生物地球化学过程对碳排放的影响机制,研究结果可为泥炭地碳排放核算提供理论支撑。  相似文献   

12.
Summary Constructed microbial mats, used for studies on the removal and transformation of metals and metalloids, are made by combining cyanobacteria inoculum with a sediment inoculum from a metal-contaminated site. These mats are a heterotrophic and autotrophic community dominated by cyanobacteria and held together by slimy secretions produced by various microbial groups. When contaminated water containing high concentrations of metals is passed over microbial mats immobilized on glass wool, there is rapid removal of the metals from the water. The mats are tolerant of high concentrations of toxic metals and metalloids, such as cadmium, lead, chromium, selenium and arsenic (up to 350 mg L–1). This tolerance may be due to a number of mechanisms at the molecular, cellular and community levels. Management of toxic metals by the mats is related to deposition of metal compounds outside the cell surfaces as well as chemical modification of the aqueous environment surrounding the mats. The location of metal deposition is determined by factors such as redox gradients, cell surface micro-environments and secretion of extra-cellular bioflocculents. Metal-binding flocculents (polyanionic polysaccharides) are produced in large quantities by the cyanobacterial component of the mat. Steep gradients of redox and oxygen exist from the surface through the laminated strata of microbes. These are produced by photosynthetic oxygen production at the surface and heterotrophic consumption in the deeper regions. Additionally, sulfur-reducing bacteria colonize the lower strata, removing and utilizing the reducing H2S, rather than water, for photosynthesis. Thus, depending on the chemical character of the microzone of the mat, the sequestered metals or metalloids can be oxidized, reduced and precipitated as sulfides or oxides. For example precipitates of red amorphous elemental selenium were identified in mats exposed to selenate (Se-VI) and insoluble precipitates of manganese, chromium, cadmium, cobalt, and lead were found in mats exposed to soluble salts of these metals. Constructed microbial mats offer several advantages for use in the bioremediation of metal-contaminated sites. These include low cost, durability, ability to function in both fresh and salt water, tolerance to high concentrations of metals and metalloids and the unique capacity of mats to form associations with new microbial species. Thus one or several desired microbial species might be integrated into mats in order to design the community for specific bioremediation applications.  相似文献   

13.
Exposure to moderate doses of UV B (0.35 to 0.79 W m(sup-2) s(sup-1) or 0.98 to 2.2 (mu)mol of photons m(sup-2) s(sup-1) at 310 nm) caused the surface layers of microbial mats from Solar Lake, Sinai, Egypt, to become visibly lighter green. Concurrent with the color change were rapid and dramatic reductions in gross photosynthesis and in the resultant high porewater oxygen concentrations in the surface layers of the mats. The depths at which both maximum gross photosynthesis and maximum oxygen concentrations occurred were displaced downward. In contrast, gross photosynthesis in the deeper layers of the mats increased in response to UV B incident upon the surface. The cessation of exposure to UV B partially reversed all of these changes. Taken together, these responses suggest that photoautotrophic members of the mat community, most likely the dominant cyanobacterium Microcoleus chthonoplastes, were migrating in response to the added UV B. The migration phenomenon was also observed in response to increases in visible radiation and UV A, but UV B was ca. 100-fold more effective than visible radiation and ca. 20-fold more effective than UV A in provoking the response. Migrating microorganisms within this mat are apparently able to sense UV B directly and respond behaviorally to limit their exposure to UV. Because of strong vertical gradients of light and dissolved substances in microbial mats, the migration and the resultant vertical redistribution of photosynthetic activity have important consequences for both the photobiology of the cyanobacteria and the net primary productivity of the mat ecosystem.  相似文献   

14.
Iron metabolism in anoxic environments at near neutral pH   总被引:29,自引:0,他引:29  
Anaerobic dissimilatory ferric iron-reducing and ferrous iron-oxidizing bacteria gain energy through reduction or oxidation of iron minerals and presumably play an important role in catalyzing iron transformations in anoxic environments. Numerous ferric iron-reducing bacteria have been isolated from a great diversity of anoxic environments, including sediments, soils, deep terrestrial subsurfaces, and hot springs. In contrast, only few ferrous iron-oxidizing bacteria are known so far. At neutral pH, iron minerals are barely soluble, and the mechanisms of electron transfer to or from iron minerals are still only poorly understood. In natural habitats, humic substances may act as electron carriers for ferric iron-reducing bacteria. Also fermenting bacteria were shown to channel electrons to ferric iron via humic acids. Whether quinones or cytochromes released from cells act as electron transfer components in ferric iron reduction is still a matter of debate. Anaerobic ferrous iron-oxidizing phototrophic bacteria, on the other hand, appear to excrete complexing agents to prevent precipitation of ferric iron oxides at their cell surfaces. The present review evaluates recent findings on the physiology of ferric iron-reducing and ferrous iron-oxidizing bacteria with respect to their relevance to microbial iron transformations in nature.  相似文献   

15.
In situ microsensor measurements were combined with biogeochemical methods to determine oxygen, sulfur, and carbon cycling in microbial mats growing in a solar saltern (Salin-de-Giraud, France). Sulfate reduction rates closely followed the daily temperature changes and were highest during the day at 25°C and lowest during the night at 11°C, most probably fueled by direct substrate interactions between cyanobacteria and sulfate-reducing bacteria. Sulfate reduction was the major mineralization process during the night and the contribution of aerobic respiration to nighttime DIC production decreased. This decrease of aerobic respiration led to an increasing contribution of sulfide (and iron) oxidation to nighttime O2 consumption. A peak of elemental sulfur in a layer of high sulfate reduction at low sulfide concentration underneath the oxic zone indicated anoxygenic photosynthesis and/or sulfide oxidation by iron, which strongly contributed to sulfide consumption. We found a significant internal carbon cycling in the mat, and sulfate reduction directly supplied DIC for photosynthesis. The mats were characterized by a high iron content of 56 mol Fe cm–3, and iron cycling strongly controlled the sulfur cycle in the mat. This included sulfide precipitation resulting in high FeS contents with depth, and reactions of iron oxides with sulfide, especially after sunset, leading to a pronounced gap between oxygen and sulfide gradients and an unusual persistence of a pH peak in the uppermost mat layer until midnight.  相似文献   

16.
Oxygen toxicity and microbial evolution   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
T Bilinski 《Bio Systems》1991,24(4):305-312
It is postulated that the role of oxygen toxicity in the evolution of life strongly depends on the origin of molecular oxygen, due to the strong redox buffering capacity of Precambrian waters containing large amounts of ferrous and manganese cations. The critical selective pressure could be observed only after aerobic photosynthesis had been developed, due to the high local concentration of oxygen in close vicinity of photosynthesizing cells. It is also postulated that early oxygen-evolving organisms excreted a substantial part of this element in the form of hydrogen peroxide. As a consequence of the high reactivity of this compound with ferrous and manganese cations, an important percentage of iron deposits were produced with H2O2 as a major oxidant after the development of aerobic photosynthesis. It is postulated that negatively charged extracellular polymers of simple pro- and eukaryotic organisms function as sacrificial targets of hydroxyl radicals and at the same time as extracellular equivalents of superoxide dismutases, in these two ways protecting cellular membranes against oxidative damage. The role of oxygen toxicity in developing aerobic mechanisms of iron uptake is also discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Aquifer sediments from Norman, Oklahoma, were used to study the potential for microbial reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III). Black, clay-like sediments rapidly reduced Cr(VI) in both autoclaved and viable microcosms, indicating an abiotic mechanism. Lightcolored sandy sediments slowly reduced Cr(VI) only in viable microcosms, indicating a biological process. Cr(VI) reduction in these sediments had a pH optimum of 6.8 and temperature optima of 22°C and 50°C. Nearly complete inhibition of Cr(VI) reduction was observed when sandy sediments were shaken in the presence of oxygen. The addition of nitrate but not sulfate, selenate, or ferrous iron to sandy sediments inhibited Cr(VI) reduction. When electron acceptors were supplied in combinations with Cr(VI), reduction of Cr(VI) was greatest in the absence of nitrate. No loss of sulfate and no production of Fe(II) occurred in the presence of Cr(VI). The addition of molybdate to the microcosms did not affect Cr(VI) reduction in sandy sediments until very high concentrations (40 times the Cr[VI] concentration) were used. Interestingly, the addition of bromoethanesulfonic acid in amounts less than, or slightly greater than, the Cr(VI) concentration partially inhibited Cr(VI) reduction in sandy sediments. In the absence of this bacterial inhibitor, the sandy sediments produced methane. A methanogenic enrichment capable of reducing Cr(VI) during growth was obtained from sandy sediments. However, the enrichment produced methane only when Cr(VI) was absent, indicating that a shift in electron flow from methane production to Cr(VI) reduction may have occurred. These studies showed that Cr(VI) reduction in sandy aquifer sediments is a biologically mediated, anaerobic process that is inhibited by oxygen and partially inhibited by nitrate. The lack of sulfate reduction and sulfide production, as well as a lack of inhibition of Cr(VI) reduction by molybdate, argues against an indirect mechanism for Cr(VI) reduction, in which the sulfide produced during sulfate reduction would chemically reduce Cr(VI). Rather, Cr(VI) reduction may be mediated by a community of microorganisms that ordinarily use methanogenesis as the terminal electron-accepting process.  相似文献   

18.
Human porphyria cutanea tarda is an unusual consequence of common hepatic disorders such as alcoholic liver disease. Hepatic iron plays a key role in the expression of the metabolic lesions, i.e., defective hepatic decarboxylation of porphyrinogens, catalyzed by uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase. This prompted the present study to determine the in vitro effects of iron on the uroporphyrinogen substrate in the absence and presence of atmospheric oxygen. We observed that (i) unless oxygen is the limiting reactant, autoxidation of ferrous iron and iron-catalyzed oxidation of uroporphyrinogen occurred soon after initiating the reaction at pH 7.4 and 30 degrees C in buffers which are non- or poor chelators of iron; (ii) the rates of uroporphyrinogen oxidation were proportional to the initial concentration of ferrous ion; (iii) about 70% of the oxidations of uroporphyrinogen were accountable due to a free-radical chain reaction pathway involving superoxide radical and hence inhibitable by superoxide dismutase; (iv) uroporphyrinogen could be further oxidized to completion by the hydroxyl radical since the reaction was partially inhibited by both mannitol and catalase which prevent hydroxyl radical production; (v) the oxidizing effects of ferric ion on uroporphyrinogen were none or negligible as compared to those of ferrous ion. Ferric was reduced to ferrous ion in the presence of dithiothreitol. When the ferrous ion thus formed was reoxidized in the presence of atmospheric oxygen, minor but definite oxidations of both uroporphyrinogen and dithiothreitol were observed. The oxidations of Fe2+ and uroporphyrinogen could be blocked by 1,10-phenanthroline, a ferrous iron chelator. The data suggest that ferrous is the reactive form of iron that may contribute to pathogenic development of the disease by irreversibly oxidizing the porphyrinogen substrates to nonmetabolizable porphyrins, which accumulate in porphyric liver.  相似文献   

19.
The responses of hypersaline microbial mats to the addition of acetate, glycolate or glucose were investigated using oxygen, pH and sulphide microsensors. Changes in community structure were investigated with molecular techniques. Acetate addition inhibited respiration in the photic zone, stimulated respiration in the aphotic zone and had no effect on gross photosynthesis. Glycolate addition strongly increased both respiration and gross photosynthesis in the photic zone. Thus, glycolate and acetate were probably consumed in those regions of the mat where these substrates are usually formed. Moreover, photosynthesis was only stimulated by increased respiration and concomitant CO2 production in the photic zone which indicates that the photosynthetic and respiratory populations must be present in close proximity to each other. Glucose addition had an unexpected negative effect on the microbial population, strongly inhibiting both respiration and gross photosynthesis within hours. After four days, oxygen profiles in the light were equal to those measured in the dark. After replacing the water phase with unamended water, photosynthesis and respiration recovered within a week. None of the physiological changes were accompanied by detectable shifts in the cyanobacterial or the overall microbial community. The mechanism of inhibition of photosynthesis by glucose requires further investigation.  相似文献   

20.
The ability of the flavonoid dihydroquercetin to prevent or accelerate the accumulation of reactive oxygen species and the metabolites of oxidative stress, carbonyl compounds has been studied. It has been shown on a model of oxidation of lecithin that dihydroquercetin exhibits a prooxidant effect in the alkaline region of pH, whereas at neutral and acidic pH values dihydroquercetin is an effective antioxidant. In the presence of ferrous iron ions, which catalyze the Fenton reaction, dihydroquercetin forms a complex with metal that shows the antioxidant activity in the region of high pH values. It has been found that the oxidation of lecithin in the presence of 20–200 μM ferrous iron is inhibited by dihydroquercetin to a concentration of 3.2 mM. At higher concentration of dihydroquercetin in the presence of ferrous iron, accumulation of malonic dialdehyde occurs, indicating the presence of the prooxidant activity of dihydroquercetin.  相似文献   

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