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1.
The anaerobic bacterium Syntrophus aciditrophicus metabolized benzoate in pure culture in the absence of hydrogen-utilizing partners or terminal electron acceptors. The pure culture of S. aciditrophicus produced approximately 0.5 mol of cyclohexane carboxylate and 1.5 mol of acetate per mol of benzoate, while a coculture of S. aciditrophicus with the hydrogen-using methanogen Methanospirillum hungatei produced 3 mol of acetate and 0.75 mol of methane per mol of benzoate. The growth yield of the S. aciditrophicus pure culture was 6.9 g (dry weight) per mol of benzoate metabolized, whereas the growth yield of the S. aciditrophicus-M. hungatei coculture was 11.8 g (dry weight) per mol of benzoate. Cyclohexane carboxylate was metabolized by S. aciditrophicus only in a coculture with a hydrogen user and was not metabolized by S. aciditrophicus pure cultures. Cyclohex-1-ene carboxylate was incompletely degraded by S. aciditrophicus pure cultures until a free energy change (ΔG′) of −9.2 kJ/mol was reached (−4.7 kJ/mol for the hydrogen-producing reaction). Cyclohex-1-ene carboxylate, pimelate, and glutarate transiently accumulated at micromolar levels during growth of an S. aciditrophicus pure culture with benzoate. High hydrogen (10.1 kPa) and acetate (60 mM) levels inhibited benzoate metabolism by S. aciditrophicus pure cultures. These results suggest that benzoate fermentation by S. aciditrophicus in the absence of hydrogen users proceeds via a dismutation reaction in which the reducing equivalents produced during oxidation of one benzoate molecule to acetate and carbon dioxide are used to reduce another benzoate molecule to cyclohexane carboxylate, which is not metabolized further. Benzoate fermentation to acetate, CO2, and cyclohexane carboxylate is thermodynamically favorable and can proceed at free energy values more positive than −20 kJ/mol, the postulated minimum free energy value for substrate metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
Benzoate degradation by an anaerobic, syntrophic bacterium, strain SB, in coculture with Desulfovibrio sp. strain G-11 reached a threshold value which depended on the amount of acetate added and ranged from about 2.5 to 29.9 (mu)M. Increasing acetate concentrations also uncompetitively inhibited benzoate degradation. The apparent V(infmax) and apparent K(infm) for benzoate degradation decreased with increasing acetate concentration, but the benzoate degradation capacities (V(infmax)/K(infm)) of cell suspensions remained comparable. The addition of an acetate-using bacterium to cocultures after the threshold was reached resulted in the degradation of benzoate to below the detection limit. Mathematical simulations showed that the benzoate threshold was not predicted by the inhibitory effect of acetate on benzoate degradation kinetics. With nitrate instead of sulfate as the terminal electron acceptor, no benzoate threshold was observed in the presence of 20 mM acetate even though the kinetics of benzoate degradation were slower with nitrate rather than sulfate as the electron acceptor. When strain SB was grown with Desulfovibrio sp. strain DG2 that had a fourfold-lower V(infmax) for hydrogen use than strain G-11, the V(infmax) for benzoate degradation was 37-fold lower than that of strain SB-G-11 cocultures. The Gibb's free energy for benzoate degradation was less negative in cell suspensions with a threshold than in suspensions without a threshold. These studies showed that the threshold was not a function of the inhibition of benzoate degradation by acetate or the toxicity of the undissociated form of acetate. Rather, a critical or minimal Gibb's free energy may exist where thermodynamic constraints preclude further benzoate degradation.  相似文献   

3.
An anaerobic, motile, gram-negative, rod-shaped, syntrophic, benzoate-degrading bacterium, strain SB, was isolated in pure culture with crotonate as the energy source. Benzoate was degraded only in association with an H2-using bacterium. The kinetics of benzoate degradation by cell suspensions of strain SB in coculture with Desulfovibrio strain G-11 was studied by using progress curve analysis. The coculture degraded benzoate to a threshold concentration of 214 nM to 6.5 microM, with no further benzoate degradation observed even after extended incubation times. The value of the threshold depended on the amount of benzoate added and, consequently, the amount of acetate produced. The addition of sodium acetate, but not that of sodium chloride, affected the threshold value; higher acetate concentrations resulted in higher threshold values for benzoate. When a cell suspension that had reached a threshold benzoate concentration was reamended with benzoate, benzoate was used without a lag. The hydrogen partial pressure was very low and formate was not detected in cell suspensions that had degraded benzoate to a threshold value. The Gibbs free energy change calculations showed that the degradation of benzoate was favorable when the threshold was reached. These studies showed that the threshold for benzoate degradation was not caused by nutritional limitations, the loss of metabolic activity, or inhibition by hydrogen or formate. The data are consistent with a thermodynamic explanation for the existence of a threshold, but a kinetic explanation based on acetate inhibition may also account for the existence of a threshold.  相似文献   

4.
From anaerobic freshwater enrichment cultures with 3-hydroxybenzoate as sole substrate, a slightly curved rod-shaped bacterium was isolated in coculture with Desulfovibrio vulgaris as hydrogen scavenger. The new isolate degraded only 3-hydroxybenzoate or benzoate, and depended on syntrophic cooperation with a hydrogenoxidizing methanogen or sulfate reducer. 3-Hydroxybenzoate was degraded via reductive dehydroxylation to benzoate. With 2-hydroxybenzoate (salicylate), short coccoid rods were enriched from anaerobic freshwater mud samples, and were isolated in defined coculture with D. vulgaris. This isolate also fermented 3-hydroxybenzoate or benzoate in obligate syntrophy with a hydrogen-oxidizing anaerobe. The new isolates were both Gram-negative, non-sporeforming strict anaerobes. They fermented hydroxybenzoate or benzoate to acetate, CO2, and, presumably, hydrogen which was oxidized by the syntrophic partner organism. With hydroxybenzoates, but not with benzoate, Acetobacterium woodii could also serve as syntrophic partner. Other substrates such as sugars, alcohols, fatty or amino acids were not fermented. External electron acceptors such as sulfate, sulfite, nitrate, or fumarate were not reduced. In enrichment cultures with 4-hydroxybenzoate, decarboxylation to phenol was the initial step in degradation which finally led to acetate, methane and CO2.  相似文献   

5.
Inhibition of the fermentation of propionate to methane and carbon dioxide by hydrogen, acetate, and propionate was analyzed with a mesophilic propionate-acclimatized sludge that consisted of numerous flocs (size, 150 to 300 μm). The acclimatized sludge could convert propionate to methane and carbon dioxide stoichiometrically without accumulating hydrogen and acetate in a propionate-minimal medium. Inhibition of propionate utilization by propionate could be analyzed by a second-order substrate inhibition model (shown below) given that the substrate saturation constant, Ks, was 15.9 μM; the substrate inhibition constant, Ki, was 0.79 mM; and the maximum specific rate of propionate utilization, qm, was 2.15 mmol/g of mixed-liquor volatile suspended solids (MLVSS) per day: qs = qmS/[Ks + S + (S2/Ki)], where qs is the specific rate of propionate utilization and S is the initial concentration of undissociated propionic acid. For inhibition by hydrogen and acetate to propionate utilization, a noncompetitive product inhibition model was used: qs = qm/[1 + (P/Kp)n], where P is the initial concentration of hydrogen or undissociated acetic acid and Kp is the inhibition constant. Kinetic analysis gave, for hydrogen inhibition, Kp(H2) = 0.11 atm (= 11.1 kPa, 71.5 μM), qm = 2.40 mmol/g of MLVSS per day, and n = 1.51 and, for acetate inhibition, Kp(HAc) = 48.6 μM, qm = 1.85 mmol/g of MLVSS per day, and n = 0.96. It could be concluded that the increase in undissociated propionic acid concentration was a key factor in inhibition of propionate utilization and that hydrogen and acetate cooperatively inhibited propionate degradation, suggesting that hydrogenotrophic and acetoclastic methanogens might play an important role in enhancing propionate degradation to methane and carbon dioxide.  相似文献   

6.
Pure cultures of Geobacter sulfurreducens and other Fe(III)-reducing bacteria accumulated hydrogen to partial pressures of 5 to 70 Pa with acetate, butyrate, benzoate, ethanol, lactate, or glucose as the electron donor if electron release to an acceptor was limiting. G. sulfurreducens coupled acetate oxidation with electron transfer to an anaerobic partner bacterium in the absence of ferric iron or other electron acceptors. Cocultures of G. sulfurreducens and Wolinella succinogenes with nitrate as the electron acceptor degraded acetate efficiently and grew with doubling times of 6 to 8 h. The hydrogen partial pressures in these acetate-degrading cocultures were considerably lower, in the range of 0.02 to 0.04 Pa. From these values and the concentrations of the other reactants, it was calculated that in this cooperation the free energy change available to G. sulfurreducens should be about −53 kJ per mol of acetate oxidized, assuming complete conversion of acetate to CO2 and H2. However, growth yields (18.5 g of dry mass per mol of acetate for the coculture, about 14 g for G. sulfurreducens) indicated considerably higher energy gains. These yield data, measurement of hydrogen production rates, and calculation of the diffusive hydrogen flux indicated that electron transfer in these cocultures may not proceed exclusively via interspecies hydrogen transfer but may also proceed through an alternative carrier system with higher redox potential, e.g., a c-type cytochrome that was found to be excreted by G. sulfurreducens into the culture fluid. Syntrophic acetate degradation was also possible with G. sulfurreducens and Desulfovibrio desulfuricans CSN but only with nitrate as electron acceptor. These cultures produced cell yields of 4.5 g of dry mass per mol of acetate, to which both partners contributed at about equal rates. These results demonstrate that some Fe(III)-reducing bacteria can oxidize organic compounds under Fe(III) limitation with the production of hydrogen, and they provide the first example of rapid acetate oxidation via interspecies electron transfer at moderate temperature.  相似文献   

7.
Strain SBT is a new, strictly anaerobic, gram-negative, nonmotile, non-sporeforming, rod-shaped bacterium that degrades benzoate and certain fatty acids in syntrophic association with hydrogen/formate-using microorganisms. Strain SBT produced approximately 3 mol of acetate and 0.6 mol of methane per mol of benzoate in coculture with Methanospirillum hungatei strain JF1. Saturated fatty acids, some unsaturated fatty acids, and methyl esters of butyrate and hexanoate also supported growth of strain SBT in coculture with Desulfovibrio strain G11. Strain SBT grew in pure culture with crotonate, producing acetate, butyrate, caproate, and hydrogen. The molar growth yield was 17 ± 1 g cell dry mass per mol of crotonate. Strain SBT did not grow with fumarate, iron(III), polysulfide, or oxyanions of sulfur or nitrogen as electron acceptors with benzoate as the electron donor. The DNA base composition of strain SBT was 43.1 mol% G+C. Analysis of the 16 S rRNA gene sequence placed strain SBT in the δ-subdivision of the Proteobacteria, with sulfate-reducing bacteria. Strain SBT was most closely related to members of the genus Syntrophus. The clear phenotypic and genotypic differences between strain SBT and the two described species in the genus Syntrophus justify the formation of a new species, Syntrophus aciditrophicus. Received: 2 June 1998 / Accepted: 16 November 1998  相似文献   

8.
Methanogenic enrichments catabolizing 13 mM phenylacetate or 4 mM phenol were established at 37°C, using a 10% inoculum from a municipal anaerobic digester. By using agar roll tubes of the basal medium plus 0.1% yeast extract-25 mM fumarate, a hydrogenotrophic lawn of Wolinella succinogenes and phenol or phenylacetate, strains P-2 and PA-1, respectively, were isolated in coculture with W. succinogenes. With the lawn deleted, PA-1 was isolated in pure culture. Strain P-2 is apparently a new species of anaerobic, motile, gram-negative, spindle-shaped, small rod that as yet has been grown only in coculture with W. succinogenes. It used phenol, hydrocinnamate, benzoate, and phenylacetate as energy sources. Product recovery by the coculture, per mole of phenol and 4.4 mol of fumarate used, included 2.03, 0.12, 0.08, and 3.23 mol, respectively, of acetate, propionate, butyrate, and succinate. Carbon recovery was 75% and H recovery was 80%, although CO2 and a few other possible products were not determined. That P-2 is an obligate proton-reducing acetogen and possible pathways for its degradation of phenol are discussed. Strain PA-1 is apparently a new species of anaerobic, motile, relatively small, gram-negative rod. It utilized compounds such as phenylacetate, hydrocinnamate, benzoate, phenol, resorcinol, gallate, 4-aminophenol, 2-aminobenzoate, pyruvate, Casamino Acids, and aspartate as energy sources in coculture with W. succinogenes. Per mole of phenylacetate and 1.44 mol of fumarate used, 1.04, 0.53, and 0.78 mol of acetate, propionate, and succinate, respectively, were recovered from the coculture. Only about 50% of the carbon and H were recovered. In coculture with Methanospirillum hungatei, 0.96 mol of acetate and 0.25 mol of methane were recovered per mol of pyruvate used; 0.90 mol of acetate and 0.33 mol of methane, per mol of fumarate used; 0.93 mol of acetate and 0.54 mol of methane, per mol of aspartate used; and 1.71 mol of acetate and 0.57 mol of methane, per mol of glucose used. Carbon and H recoveries, assuming CO2 and ammonia were produced in stoichiometric amounts, were 97 and 98% for pyruvate, 72.5 and 82% for fumarate, 96.5 and 98% for aspartate, and 61.8 and 76% for glucose. No explanation such as contamination could be found for the fact that the coculture PA-1 plus Wolinella sp. did not use glucose; after growth with M. hungatei on pyruvate, however, the latter coculture used glucose. The PA-1 pure culture produced 0.86 mol of propionate per mol of succinate used during growth. PA-1 produced a small amount of H2. Strain PA-1 is the most versatile anaerobic bacterium yet known that catabolizes monobenzenoids in the absence of electron acceptors such as sulfate or nitrate.  相似文献   

9.
Kinetics of butyrate, acetate, and hydrogen metabolism were determined with butyrate-limited, chemostat-grown tricultures of a thermophilic butyrate-utilizing bacterium together with Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum and the TAM organism, a thermophilic acetate-utilizing methanogenic rod. Kinetic parameters were determined from progress curves fitted to the integrated form of the Michaelis-Menten equation. The apparent half-saturation constants, Km, for butyrate, acetate, and dissolved hydrogen were 76 μM, 0.4 mM, and 8.5 μM, respectively. Butyrate and hydrogen were metabolized to a concentration of less than 1 μM, whereas acetate uptake usually ceased at a concentration of 25 to 75 μM, indicating a threshold level for acetate uptake. No significant differences in Km values for butyrate degradation were found between chemostat- and batch-grown tricultures, although the maximum growth rate was somewhat higher in the batch cultures in which the medium was supplemented with yeast extract. Acetate utilization was found to be the rate-limiting reaction for complete degradation of butyrate to methane and carbon dioxide in continuous culture. Increasing the dilution rate resulted in a gradual accumulation of acetate. The results explain the low concentrations of butyrate and hydrogen normally found during anaerobic digestion and the observation that acetate is the first volatile fatty acid to accumulate upon a decrease in retention time or increase in organic loading of a digestor.  相似文献   

10.
A stable, syntrophic benzoate-degrading bacterial consortium was enriched from sewage sludge. It oxidized benzoate or 3-phenylpropionate to acetate, H2 and CO2. As hydrogen scavengers Methanospirillum hungatei and Desulfovibrio sp. were present. The benzoate-degrading bacteria of this syntrophic culture and of Syntrophus buswelli were able to grow with benzoate/crotonate or crotonate alone in the absence of a hydrogen-utilizing partner organism. If crotonate was the only substrate, acetate and butyrate were produced, while during growth on benzoate or 3-phenylpropionate crotonate served as a reducible co-substrate and was exclusively converted to butyrate. In the presence of crotonate interspecies hydrogen transfer was not necessary as a hydrogen sink. The benzoate degrader was isolated as a pure culture with crotonate as the only carbon source. The pure culture could also grow with benzoate/crotonate or 3-phenylpropionate/crotonate. The effect of high concentrations of crotonate and of acetate or butyrate on growth of the benzoate degrader was investigated. The benzoate degrader was compared with S. buswellii for its morphology, physiology and DNA base composition. Except for the fact that S. buswellii was also able to grow on cinnamate, no differences between the two organisms were detected. The isolate is named S. buswelli, strain GA.  相似文献   

11.
Hydrazine has been tested as a substrate and inhibitor of nitrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii. It is a linear noncompetitive inhibitor of acetylene reduction, with Kil = Kis = 80 mM at pH 8.0. Carbon monoxide is a linear noncompetitive inhibitor of hydrazine reduction with Kii = Kis = 2 × 10?4atm. The inhibition of acetylene reduction by hydrazine is unaffected by the presence of hydrogen, and hydrogen does not inhibit the reduction of hydrazine. Hydrazine can completely suppress hydrogen evolution, while not inhibiting phosphate hydrolysis. The apparent Km for hydrazine reduction varies with pH, reaching a limiting value of about 25 mM at high pH. The apparent Ki for hydrazine inhibition of hydrogen evolution reaches a similar limiting value at high pH. By varying the concentration of ATP it is possible to alter the relative allocation of electrons to acetylene or hydrazine. Hydrazine is a relatively more potent inhibitor of acetylene reduction at low levels of ATP. It is concluded that hydrazine is able to react effectively with a less reduced state of the enzyme from A. vinelandii than is acetylene or dinitrogen.  相似文献   

12.
Steady-state and presteady-state kinetic parameters for plasmins derived from the two rabbit plasminogen isozymes have been determined. Steady-state kinetic experiments with N-α-tosyl-l-arginine methyl ester indicate that each isozyme has a similar V. Plasmin isozyme 2 has a higher Km value for this substrate as well as a higher Ki, for the competitive inhibitor, benzamidine-HCl. Presteady-state kinetic experiments, using the p-nitrophenyl esters of p-(methylethylsulfoniummethyl)benzoate, p-(pyridiniummethyl) benzoate, p-(thiouroniummethyl)benzoate and p-(guanidinium)benzoate, indicate that each plasmin has similar rate constants of acylation (k2). However, values of the dissociation constant (KS) indicate that plasmin isozyme 1 has a greater binding affinity for these substrates than does isozyme 2. The magnitude of this difference varies with the substrate and is the greatest for those containing analogs of the guanidino moiety of l-arginine.  相似文献   

13.
Luit Slooten  Adriaan Nuyten 《BBA》1984,766(1):88-97
(1) Rates of ATP synthesis and ADP-arsenate synthesis catalyzed by Rhodospirillum rubrum chromatophores were determined with the firefly luciferase method and by a coupled enzyme assay involving hexokinase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. (2) Vm for ADP-arsenate synthesis was about 2-times lower than Vm for ATP-synthesis. With saturating [ADP], K(Asi) was about 20% higher than K(Pi). With saturating [anion], K(ADP) was during arsenylation about 20% lower than during phosphorylation. (3) Plots of 1v vs. 1[substrate] were non-linear at low concentrations of the fixed substrate. The non-linearity was such as to suggest a positive cooperativity between sites binding the variable substrate, resulting in an increased VmKm ratio. High concentrations of the fixed substrate cause a similar increase in VmKm, but abolish the cooperativity of the sites binding the variable substrate. (4) Low concentrations of inorganic arsenate (Asi) stimulate ATP synthesis supported by low concentrations of Pi and ADP about 2-fold. (5) At high ADP concentrations, the apparent Ki of Asi for inhibition of ATP-synthesis was 2–3-times higher than the apparent Km of Asi for arsenylation; the apparent Ki of Pi for inhibition of ADP-arsenate synthesis was about 40% lower than the apparent Km of Pi for ATP synthesis. (6) The results are discussed in terms of a model in which Pi and Asi compete for binding to a catalytic as well as an allosteric site. The interaction between these sites is modulated by the ADP concentration. At high ADP concentrations, interaction between these sites occurs only when they are occupied with different species of anion.  相似文献   

14.
Cell extracts (27000xg supernatant) of acetate grown Methanosarcina barkeri were found to have carbonic anhydrase activity (0.41 U/mg protein), which was lost upon heating or incubation with proteinase K. The activity was inhibited by Diamox (apparent K i=0.5 mM), by azide (apparent K i=1 mM), and by cyanide (apparent K i=0.02 mM). These and other properties indicate that the archaebacterium contains the enzyme carbonic anhydrase (EC 4.2.1.1). Evidence is presented that the protein is probably located in the cytoplasm. Methanol or H2/CO2 grown cells of M. barkeri showed no or only very little carbonic anhydrase activity. After transfer of these cells to acetate medium the activity was induced suggesting a function of this enzyme in acetate fermentation to CO2 and CH4. Interestingly, Desulfobacter postgatei and Desulfotomaculum acetoxidans, which oxidize acetate to 2 CO2 with sulfate as electron acceptor, were also found to exhibit carbonic anhydrase activity (0.2 U/mg protein).  相似文献   

15.
Complexation equilibria between Al(III) and (−)-epigallocathechin gallate (EGCG) in the presence of acetate buffer have been studied by spectrophotometry. The method is based on the competition between EGCG and buffer ligands for Al(III) ions. The apparent formation constant of the EGCG complex for Al(III), which could be determined by measuring the absorbance of the free EGCG, decreased with increasing acetate ion concentration at a fixed pH. This phenomenon has been quantitatively investigated and both types of complexes (EGCG and acetate) could be analyzed. The apparent formation constant of Al(III) complex with EGCG also decreased with decreasing pH at a fixed acetate ion concentration. The pH dependence of the apparent formation constant indicates the 1:1 competition between metal ions and hydrogen ions for the binding site of EGCG. The intrinsic formation constant of Al-EGCG complex, the proton association constant of EGCG and the formation constant of Al-acetate complex are found to be log KAl-EGCG = 7.6 ± 0.1, log KH-EGCG = 7.65 ± 0.03 and log KAl-acetate = 2.07 ± 0.05 by a graphical analysis.  相似文献   

16.
Arthrobacter sp. strain GLP-1, grown on glucose as a carbon source, utilizes the herbicide glyphosate [N-(phosphonomethyl)glycine] as its sole source of phosphorus as well as its sole source of nitrogen. The mutant strain GLP-1/Nit-1 utilizes glyphosate as its sole source of nitrogen as well. In strain GLP-1, Pi was a potent competitive inhibitor of glyphosate uptake (Ki, 24 μM), while the affinity of Pi for the uptake system of strain GLP-1/Nit-1 was reduced by 2 orders of magnitude (Ki, 2.3 mM). It is concluded that the inability of strain GLP-1 to utilize glyphosate as a source of nitrogen is due to the stringent control of glyphosate uptake by excess phosphate released during the degradation of the herbicide.  相似文献   

17.
Anodic microbial communities in acetate-fed microbial fuel cells (MFCs) were analyzed using stable-isotope probing of 16S rRNA genes followed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis. The results revealed that Geobacter sulfurreducens and Hydrogenophaga sp. predominated in the anodic biofilm. Although the predominance of Geobacter sp. as acetoclastic exoelectrogens in acetate-fed MFC systems has been often reported, the ecophysiological role of Hydrogenophaga sp. is unknown. Therefore, we isolated and characterized a bacterium closely related to Hydrogenophaga sp. (designated strain AR20). The newly isolated strain AR20 could use molecular hydrogen (H2), but not acetate, with carbon electrode as the electron acceptor, indicating that the strain AR20 was a hydrogenotrophic exoelectrogen. This evidence raises a hypothesis that acetate was oxidized by G. sulfurreducens in syntrophic cooperation with the strain AR20 as a hydrogen-consuming partner in the acetate-fed MFC. To prove this hypothesis, G. sulfurreducens strain PCA was cocultivated with the strain AR20 in the acetate-fed MFC without any dissolved electron acceptors. In the coculture MFC of G. sulfurreducens and strain AR20, current generation and acetate degradation were the highest, and the growth of strain AR20 was observed. No current generation, acetate degradation and cell growth occurred in the strain AR20 pure culture MFC. These results show for the first time that G. sulfurreducens can oxidize acetate in syntrophic cooperation with the isolated Hydrogenophaga sp. strain AR20, with electrode as the electron acceptor.  相似文献   

18.
A phenol-degrading methanogenic enrichment was successfully immobilized in agar as shown by the stoichiometric conversion of phenol to CH4 and CO2. The enrichment contained members of three physiological groups necessary for the syntrophic mineralization of phenol: a phenol-oxidizing bacterium, a Methanothrix-like bacterium, and an H2-utilizing methanogen. The immobilization technique resulted in the cells being embedded in a long, thin agar strand (1 mm in diameter by 2 to 50 cm in length) that resembled spaghetti. Immobilization had three effects as shown by a comparative kinetic analysis of phenol degradation by free versus immobilized cells. (i) The maximum rate of degradation was reduced from 14.8 to 10.0 μg of phenol per h; (ii) the apparent Km for the overall reaction was reduced from 90 to 46 μg of phenol per ml, probably because of the retention of acetate, H2 and CO2 in the proximity of immobilized methanogens; and (iii) the cells were protected from substrate inhibition caused by high concentrations of phenol, which increased the apparent Ki value from 900 to 1,725 μg of phenol per ml. Estimates for the kinetic parameters Km, Ki, and Vmax were used in a modified substrate inhibition model that simulated rates of phenol degradation for given phenol concentrations. The simulated rates were in close agreement with experimentally derived rates for both stimulatory and inhibitory concentrations of phenol.  相似文献   

19.
An anaerobic, motile, gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium is described which degrades benzoate in coculture with an H2-utilizing organism and in the absence of exogenous electron acceptors such as O2, SO 4 = or NO 3 - . The bacterium was isolated from a municipal primary, anaerobic sewage digestor using anaerobic roll-tube medium with benzoate as the main energy source and in syntrophic association with an H2-utilizing sulfate-reducing Desulfovibrio sp. which cannot utilize benzoate or fatty acids apart from formate as energy source. The benzoate utilizer produced acetate (3 mol/mol of substrate degraded) and presumably CO2 and H2, or formate from benzoate. In media without sulfate and with Methanospirillum hungatei (a methanogen that utilizes only H2–CO2 or formate as the energy source) added, 3 mol of acetate and 0.7 mol of methane were produced per mol of benzoate and CO2 was probably formed. Low numbers of Desulfovibrio sp. were present in the methanogenic coculture and a pure coculture of the benzoate utilizer with M. hungatei was not obtained. The generation times for growth of the sulfate-reducing and methanogenic cocultures were 132 and 166h, respectively. The benzoate utilizer did not utilize other common aromatic compounds, C 3 - –C7 monocarboxylic acids, or C4-C6 dicarboxylic acids for growth, nor did it appear to use SO 4 = , NO 3 - or fumarate as alternative electron acceptors. Addition of H2 inhibited growth and benzoate degradation.  相似文献   

20.
A strictly anaerobic, benzoate-degrading bacterium,Syntrophus buswellii strain GA, was able to degrade benzoate or 3-phenylpropionate to acetate, CO2 and H2 if the hydrogen partial pressure was sufficiently low. The hydrogen was removed in syntrophic coculture byMethanospirillum hungatei or byDesulfovibrio sp. through interspecies hydrogen transfer or in pure culture by the use of crotonate as reducible cosubstrate. Alternatively,S. buswellii strain GA could grow in pure culture with crotonate. Activities of seven catabolic enzymes were measured in crude cell extracts ofS. buswellii strain GA grown with various substrates and of crotonate-grownS. buswellii strain DSM 2612A. Benzoate, 3-phenylpropionate and crotonate were activated by CoA ligases. Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase was found to be involved in the degradation of aromatic compounds and enzymes catalysing -oxidation were involved in the reaction sequence from crotonyl-CoA to acetate. Ac-type cytochrome was present in the cytoplasm, whereasb-type cytochromes were associated with the membranes of bothS. buswelli strains grown on crotonate. These indicated the presence of an electron-transport system. A high growth yield of crotonate-grownS. buswellii strain GA might be explained by electron-transport phosphorylation in addition to substrate-level phosphorylation.  相似文献   

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