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1.
Disproportionation of thiosulfate or sulfite to sulfate plus sulfide was found in several sulfate-reducing bacteria. Out of nineteen strains tested, eight disproportionated thiosulfate, and four sulfite. Growth with thiosulfate or sulfite as the sole energy source was obtained with three strains (Desulfovibrio sulfodismutans and the strains Bra02 and NTA3); additionally, D. desulfuricans strain CSN grew with sulfite but not with thiosulfate, although thiosulfate was disproportionated. Two sulfur-reducing bacteria, four phototrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (incubated in the dark), and Thiobacillus denitrificans did not disproportionate thiosulfate or sulfite. Desulfovibrio sulfodismutans and D. desulfuricans CSN formed sulfate from thiosulfate or sulfite even when simultaneously oxidizing hydrogen or ethanol, or in the presence of 50 mM sulfate. The capacities of sulfate reduction and of thiosulfate and sulfite disproportionation were constitutively present. Enzyme activities required for sulfate reduction (ATP sulfurylase, pyrophosphatase, APS reductase, sulfite reductase, thiosulfate reductase, as well as adenylate kinase and hydrogenase) were detected in sufficient activities to account for the growth rates observed. ADP sulfurylase and sulfite oxidoreductase activities were not detected. Disproportionation was sensitive to the uncoupler carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP) but not to the ATPase inhibitor dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). It is proposed that during thiosulfate and sulfite disproportionation sulfate is formed via APS reductase and ATP sulfurylase, but not by sulfite oxidoreductase. Reversed electron transport must be assumed to explain the reduction of thiosulfate and sulfite by the electrons derived from APS reductase.Abbreviations CCCP Carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - DCCD N,N-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide - APS adenosine 5-phosphosulfate (adenylylsulfate)  相似文献   

2.
The enzymatic pathways of elemental sulfur and thiosulfate disproportionation were investigated using cell-free extract of Desulfocapsa sulfoexigens. Sulfite was observed to be an intermediate in the metabolism of both compounds. Two distinct pathways for the oxidation of sulfite have been identified. One pathway involves APS reductase and ATP sulfurylase and can be described as the reversion of the initial steps of the dissimilatory sulfate reduction pathway. The second pathway is the direct oxidation of sulfite to sulfate by sulfite oxidoreductase. This enzyme has not been reported from sulfate reducers before. Thiosulfate reductase, which cleaves thiosulfate into sulfite and sulfide, was only present in cell-free extract from thiosulfate disproportionating cultures. We propose that this enzyme catalyzes the first step in thiosulfate disproportionation. The initial step in sulfur disproportionation was not identified. Dissimilatory sulfite reductase was present in sulfur and thiosulfate disproportionating cultures. The metabolic function of this enzyme in relation to elemental sulfur or thiosulfate disproportionation was not identified. The presence of the uncouplers HQNO and CCCP in growing cultures had negative effects on both thiosulfate and sulfur disproportionation. CCCP totally inhibited sulfur disproportionation and reduced thiosulfate disproportionation by 80% compared to an unamended control. HQNO reduced thiosulfate disproportionation by 80% and sulfur disproportionation by 90%.  相似文献   

3.
The formation of thionates (thiosulfate, trithionate and tetrahionate) during the reduction of sulfate or sulfite was studied with four marine and four freshwater strains of sulfate-reducing bacteria. Growing cultures of two strains of the freshwater species Desulfovibrio desulfuricans formed up to 400 M thiosulfate and 100 M trithionate under conditions of electron donor limitation. Tetrathionate was observed in lower concentrations of up to 30 M. Uncoupler-treated washed cells of the four freshwater strains formed thiosulfate and trithionate at low electron donor concentrations with sulfite in excess. In contrast, only one of four marine strains formed thionates. The freshwater strain Desulfobulbus propionicus transformed sulfite almost completely to thiosulfate and trithionate. The amounts produced increased with time, concentration of added sulfite and cell density. Tetrathionate was detected only occasionally and in low concentrations, and was probably formed by chemical oxidation of thiosulfate. The results confirm the diversity of the sulfite reduction pathways in sulfate-reducing bacteria, and suggest that thiosulfate and trithionate are normal by-products of sulfate reduction.Abbreviations CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Separation of the products formed from sulfate-35S by cell-free extracts of Chlorella pyrenoidosa (Emerson Strain 3) has permitted the identification of thiosulfate as a major product which yields acid-volatile radioactivity. The products formed, as separated by Dowex-1-nitrate chromatography, are qualitatively the same whether extracts at pH 7.0 (using TPNH as the reductant) or extracts at pH 9 [using 2,3-dimercaptopropan-1-ol, (BAL) as reductant] are employed. While thiosulfate can be separated without the addition of carrier, the inclusion of carrier improves the recovery. High concentrations of ATP which have been shown previously to inhibit the formation of acid-volatile radioactivity from radioactive sulfate, inhibit the formation of thiosulfate almost completely. Degradation of the thiosulfate formed at normal ATP concentrations reveals that most of the radioactivity is in the SO3-sulfur of the molecule suggesting that the SH-sulfur is derived from the enzyme extracts. If carrier sulfite is present during thiosulfate formation from sulfate-35S, radioactive sulfite is recovered at the expense of radioactive thiosulfate. Reconstruction experiments utilizing specifically-labeled thiosulfates indicate that radioactive sulfite formation is probably not the result of trapping a normal intermediate, but can be attributed to non-enzymatic exchange between labeled thiosulfate formed from sulfate and the non-radioactive sulfite added, suggesting that free sulfite is not an intermediate in thiosulfate formation from sulfate.  相似文献   

6.
Cell-free extracts from several microorganisms, when prepared by methods originally devised for Chlorella pyrenoidosa (Emerson strain 3) and incubated anaerobically with ATP, Mg2+, and 2, 3-dimercaptopropan-1-ol, are capable of reducing sulfate-35S to thiosulfate. These microorganisms include, in addition to C. pyrenoidosa (Emerson strain 3), several other strains of C. pyrenoidosa, Chlorella protothecoides, Chlorella vulgaris, Anacystis sp., Chlamydomonas reinhardi, Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium, and baker's yeast. Three of these organisms, E. coli, S. typhimurium, and baker's yeast, were previously reported by others to reduce sulfate to sulfite. Moreover, three mutant strains of S. typhimurium (Ba-25, Ce-363, and Bc-482) previously reported by other workers to be unable to reduce sulfate to sulfite also cannot form thiosulfate, and one mutant strain (Cd-68) reportedly able to form sulfite can also form thiosulfate. Taken together, this suggests that thiosulfate-forming activity may be a common feature of sulfate-reducing systems, and it may be present in enzymatic systems previously thought to be forming sulfite. Reasonably conclusive identification of thiosulfate is provided by ion exchange chromatography and by paper electrophoresis; the ambiguities associated with other analytical methods are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The gene encoding Desulfovibrio gigas flavoredoxin was deleted to elucidate its physiological role in the sulfate metabolism. Disruption of flr gene strongly inhibited the reduction of thiosulfate and exhibited a reduced growth in the presence of sulfite with lactate as electron donor. The growth with sulfate was not however affected by the lack of this protein. Additionally, flr mutant cells revealed a decrease of about 50% in the H2 consumption rate using thiosulfate as electron acceptor. Altogether, our results show in vivo that during sulfite respiration, trithionate and thiosulfate are produced and that flavoredoxin is specific for thiosulfate reduction.  相似文献   

8.
Studies with (35)S-labeled substrates were conducted to investigate the pathway involved in the reduction of sulfite to sulfide by cell-free extracts of the sulfate-reducing organism Desulfovibrio vulgaris. The results showed that accumulation of thiosulfate occurred when crude extracts were incubated under appropriate conditions with sulfite as substrate. With labeled sulfite as substrate, thiosulfate with equal distribution of radioactivity in both sulfur atoms was formed. When the rates of formation of (35)S(2-) from inner- and outer-labeled thiosulfate were compared, the rate of formation from outer-labeled thiosulfate was greater. Time studies with S-(35)SO(3) (2-) showed an increase of (35)S(2-) with time and an increasing ratio of doubly labeled to inner labeled thiosulfate remaining in the reaction mixture. From these studies it is concluded that thiosulfate is a stable intermediate formed from sulfite during the reduction of sulfate by D. vulgaris. Both sulfur atoms are derived from sulfite; during the utilization of thiosulfate, the outer sulfur is reduced to sulfide and the inner sulfur recycles through a sulfite pool.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The fates of the two different sulfur atoms of the thiosulfate molecule during anaerobic disproportionation by the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans were followed by isotope mass spectrometry. During disproportionation, 32S-thiosulfate was preferentially metabolized, and the residual thiosulfate became enriched in 34S. The sulfate formed was isotopically heavier than the inner sulfur of the consumed thiosulfate. Vice versa, the sulfide formed was isotopically lighter than the outer sulfur of the consumed thiosulfate. These results indicate that thiosulfate is cleaved to intermediates that undergo further disproportionation to sulfate and sulfide in a second step. These intermediates are probably elemental sulfur and sulfite. It is concluded that disproportionation of thiosulfate, sulfite and elemental sulfur includes a combined pathway.  相似文献   

11.
Desulfotomaculum orientis (strain Singapore 1) was grown autotrophically with H2+CO2 and sulfate, thiosulfate or sulfite as electron acceptor in sulfide- and pH-controlled continuous culture. Under sulfate-limiting conditions real growth yields of up to 9.7 g cell dry mass per mol sulfate were obtained. Electron acceptor limitation resulted in the excretion of up to 14.5 mmol acetate per liter, formed by reduction of CO2 with H2. Acetate production was not coupled to an increase of growth yields: under hydrogen-limiting conditions only 1.6 mmol acetate per liter was produced, and even higher growth yields of up to 12,4 g cell dry mass per mol sulfate were obtained. With thiosulfate or sulfite as electron acceptor growth yields increased up to 17.9 g cell dry mass per mol electron acceptor. Growth yields were not simply correlated with the growth rate, and did not allow the determination of maintenance coefficients and the extrapolation to maximal yields at infinite growth rate (Y max). The maximal growth rates (max) with sulfate and thiosulfate were 0.090 and 0.109 h-1, respectively, if cells were grown continuously in sulfidostat culture under nonlimiting conditions.The net energy yield of sulfate reduction and the energy requirement for the activation of sulfate by Desulfotomaculum orientis are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Three strains (2ac9, 3ac10 and 4ac11) of oval to rodshaped, Gram negative, nonsporing sulfate-reducing bacteria were isolated from brackish water and marine mud samples with acetate as sole electron donor. All three strains grew in simple defined media supplemented with biotin and 4-aminobenzoic acid as growth factors. Acetate was the only electron donor utilized by strain 2ac9, while the other two strains used in addition ethanol and/or lactate. Sulfate served as electron acceptor and was reduced to H2S. Complete oxidation of acetate to CO2 was shown by stoichiometric measurements with strain 2ac9 in batch cultures using sulfate, sulfite or thiosulfate as electron acceptors. With sulfate an average growth yield of 4.8 g cell dry weight was obtained per mol of acetate oxidized; with sulfite or thiosulfate the growth yield on acetate was about twice as high. None of the strains contained desulfoviridin. In strain 2ac9 cytochromes of the b- and c-type were detected. Strain 2ac9 is described as type strain of the new species and genus, Desulfobacter postgatei.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract The purple photosynthetic bacterium Chromatium vinosum , strain D, catalyzes several oxidations of reduced sulfur compounds under anaerobic conditions in the light: e.g., sulfide → sulfur → sulfate, sulfite → sulfate, and thiosulfate → sulfur + sulfate. Here it is shown that no sulfur isotope effect is associated with the last of these processes; isotopic compositions of the sulfur and sulfate produced can differ, however, if the sulfane and sulfonate positions within the thiosulfate have different isotopic compositions. In the second process, an observed change from an inverse to a normal isotope effect during oxidation of sulfite may indicate the operation of 2 enzymatic pathways. In contrast to heterotrophic anaerobic reduction of oxidized sulfur compounds, anaerobic oxidations of inorganic sulfur compounds by photosynthetic bacteria are characterized by relatively small isotope effects.  相似文献   

14.
The SoxXAYZB(CD)2‐mediated pathway of bacterial sulfur‐chemolithotrophy explains the oxidation of thiosulfate, sulfide, sulfur and sulfite but not tetrathionate. Advenella kashmirensis, which oxidizes tetrathionate to sulfate, besides forming it as an intermediate during thiosulfate oxidation, possesses a soxCDYZAXOB operon. Knock‐out mutations proved that only SoxBCD is involved in A. kashmirensis tetrathionate oxidation, whereas thiosulfate‐to‐tetrathionate conversion is Sox independent. Expression of two glutathione metabolism‐related proteins increased under chemolithotrophic conditions, as compared to the chemoorganotrophic one. Substrate‐dependent oxygen consumption pattern of whole cells, and sulfur‐oxidizing enzyme activities of cell‐free extracts, measured in the presence/absence of thiol inhibitors/glutathione, corroborated glutathione involvement in tetrathionate oxidation. Furthermore, proteome analyses detected a sulfite:acceptor oxidoreductase (SorAB) exclusively under chemolithotrophic conditions, while expression of a methanol dehydrogenase (XoxF) homolog, subsequently named thiol dehydrotransferase (ThdT), was found to increase 3‐ and 10‐fold during thiosulfate‐to‐tetrathionate conversion and tetrathionate oxidation respectively. A thdT knock‐out mutant did not oxidize tetrathionate but converted half of the supplied 40 mM S‐thiosulfate to tetrathionate. Knock‐out of another thiosulfate dehydrogenase (tsdA) gene proved that both ThdT and TsdA individually converted ~ 20 mM S‐thiosulfate to tetrathionate. The overexpressed and isolated ThdT protein exhibited PQQ‐dependent thiosulfate dehydrogenation, whereas its PQQ‐independent thiol transfer activity involving tetrathionate and glutathione potentially produced a glutathione:sulfodisulfane adduct and sulfite. SoxBCD and SorAB were hypothesized to oxidize the aforesaid adduct and sulfite respectively.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The fate of 35-S during anaerobic metabolism of [35-S]sulfate, [35-S]thiosulfate, and [35-S]sulfate plus unlabeled thiosulfate by washed cell suspensions of Desulfovibrio spp, and of [35-S]thiosulfate by growing D. desulfuricans was examined. The results appear to be inconsistent with the hypothesis that thiosulfate is an intermediate in sulfate reduction. Since thiosulfate was produced from trithionate, the latter is also unlikely to be an intermediate in the reduction pathway. Extracts of D. desulfuricans catalysed exchange between sulfite and the sulfonate group of thiosulfate.  相似文献   

17.
Thiobacillus denitrificans strain RT could be grown anaerobically in batch culture on thiosulfate but not on other reduced sulfur compounds like sulfide, elemental sulfur, thiocyanate, polythionates or sulfite. During growth on thiosulfate the assimilated cell sulfur was derived totally from the outer or sulfane sulfur. Thiosulfate oxidation started with a rhodanese type cleavage between sulfane and sulfone sulfur leading to elemental sulfur and sulfite. As long as thiosulfate was present elemental sulfur was transiently accumulated within the cells in a form that could be shown to be more reactive than elemental sulfur present in a hydrophilic sulfur sol, however, less reactive than sulfane sulfur of polythionates or organic and inorganic polysulfides. When thiosulfate had been completely consumed, intracellular elemental sulfur was rapidly oxidized to sulfate with a specific rate of 45 natom S°/min·mg protein. Extracellularly offered elemental sulfur was not oxidized under anaerobic conditions.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
pH changes and sulfide production upon addition of sulfate, sulfite or thiosulfate to non-buffered H2-saturated cell suspensions of Desulfovibrio desulfuricans were studied by means of electrodes. The addition of these electron acceptors resulted in a rapid alkalinization of the suspension which was accompanied by sulfide production. At-2° C, alkalinization without immediate sulfide production could be obtained. After addition of 35S-labelled sulfate at-2° C, the label was found to be concentrated 7,500-fold in the cells, while 2 protons per sulfate molecule had disappeared from the outer bulk phase. Alkalinization and sulfide production from micromolar electron acceptor additions depended on the transmembraneous proton gradient ( pH), and were reversibly inhibited in alkaline solution (pH>8.0) or by the protonophore carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP). Protonophore-inhibited sulfide production from sulfite or thiosulfate could be restored if the cell membranes were permeabilized by the detergent cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), or if downhill transport was made possible by the addition of electron acceptors at millimolar concentrations. Sulfate was not reduced under these conditions, presumably because the cells did not contain ATP for its activation. K+-and Na+-ionophores such as nigericin, valinomycin or monensin appeared to be of limited efficiency in D. desulfuricans. In most experiments, sulfate reduction was inhibited by the K+–H+ antiporter nigericin in the presence of K+, but not by the thiocyanate anion or the K+-transporter valinomycin. The results indicate that sulfate, sulfite and thiosulfate are taken up by proton-anion symport, presumably as undissociated acids with an electroneutral mechanism, driven by the transmembraneous pH gradient ( pH) or by a solute gradient. Kinetics of alkalinization and sulfide production in cells grown with different electron acceptors revealed that D. desulfuricans has different specific uptake systems for sulfate and thiosulfate, and obviously also for sulfite. It is proposed that the electron acceptor transport finally will not consume net energy during growth in buffered medium: The protons taken up during active electron acceptor transport leave the cell with the reduced end-product by simple passive diffusion of H2S.Abbreviations CCCP carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone - FCCP carbonyl cyanide p-trifluoromethoxy phenylhydrazone - CTAB cethyltrimethylammonium bromide  相似文献   

20.
The sulfite reductase of Desulfovibrio vulgaris, strain Miyazaki F (MF), was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Ultrogel AcA34, and hydroxylapatite. The molecular weight was estimated to be 180,000 by gel filtration. It had a subunit structure of α2β2; the molecular weight of the α subunit was 50,000 and that of β, 39,000. The absorption spectrum with characteristic peaks at 629 and 409 nm and the amino acid composition resembled those of the sulfite reductase from D. vulgaris, Miyazaki K. The MF enzyme reduced sulfite to trithionate, thiosulfate, and sulfide by hydrogen when coupled with a hydrogenase-methyl viologen system, like other sulfite reductases from Desulfovibrio.  相似文献   

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