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1.
In a batch culture experiment the microaerophilic Campylobacter-like bacterium “Spirillum” 5175 derived its energy for growth from the reduction of nitrate to nitrite and nitrite to ammonia. Hereby, formate served as electron donor, acetate as carbon source, and l-cysteine as sulfur source. Nitrite was quantitatively accumulated in the medium during the reduction of nitrate; reduction of nitrite began only after nitrate was exhausted from the medium. The molar growth yield per mol formate consumed, Ym, was 2.4g/mol for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite and 2.0 g/mol for the conversion of nitrite to ammonia. The gain of ATP per mol of oxidized formate was 20% higher for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, compared to the reduction of nitrite to ammonia. With succinate as carbon source and nitrite as electron acceptor, Ym was 3.2g/mol formate, i.e. 60% higher than with acetate as carbon source. No significant amount of nitrous oxide or dinitrogen was produced during growth with nitrate or nitrite both in the presence or absence of acetylene. No growth on nitrous oxide was found. The hexaheme c nitrite reductase of “Spirillum” 5175 was an inducible enzyme. It was present in cells cultivated with nitrate or nitrite as electron acceptor. It was absent in cells grown with fumarate, but appeared in high concentration in “Spirillum” 5175 grown on elemental sulfur. Furthermore, the dissimilatory enzymes nitrate reductase and hexaheme c nitrite reductase were localized in the periplasmic part of the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

2.
Thauera selenatis was grown anaerobically in minimal medium with either selenate or nitrate as the terminal electron acceptor and acetate as the carbon source and electron donor. The molar cell protein yields, YM-protein (selenate) and YM-protein (nitrate), were found to be 7.8 g cell protein/mol selenite formed and 7.5 g cell protein/mol nitrite formed, respectively. These values represent YM values of 57 and 55 g (dry weight)/mol acetate when selenate or nitrate was the electron acceptor, respectively. Based upon a calculated YATP value of 10.0 g (dry weight) cells/mol ATP, for growth on acetate in inorganic salts, growth with selenate as the terminal electron acceptor theoretically yielded 5.7 ATP/acetate oxidized, and 5.5 ATP when nitrate was the terminal electron acceptor. The results support the conclusion that energy is conserved via electron transport phosphorylation when selenate or nitrate reduction are the terminal electron acceptors during anaerobic growth with acetate.  相似文献   

3.
The heat production rate and the simultaneous nitrate consumption and production and consumption of nitrite and nitrous oxide were monitored during the anaerobic growth of two types of dissimilatory nitrate reducers. Pseudomonas fluorescens, a denitrifier, consumed nitrate and accumulated small amounts of nitrite or nitrous oxide. The heat production rate increased steadily during the course of nitrate consumption and decreased rapidly concomitant with the depletion of the electron acceptors. A mean experimental enthalpy change value of −800 kJ/mol of nitrate and a mean growth yield value of 33 g (dry weight)/mol of nitrate consumed were obtained for different concentrations of nitrate. For Pseudomonas putrefaciens, a dissimilatory ammonium producer, the nitrate consumption resulted in an accumulation of nitrite and nitrous oxide. Nitrite consumption commenced after depletion of the nitrate; consequently, two phases were noted in the heat production rate curve during growth. A mean experimental enthalpy change value of −810 kJ/mol of nitrate was obtained for different concentrations of nitrate.  相似文献   

4.
Propionibacterium acnes P13 was isolated from human feces. The bacterium produced a particulate nitrate reductase and a soluble nitrite reductase when grown with nitrate or nitrite. Reduced viologen dyes were the preferred electron donors for both enzymes. Nitrous oxide reductase was never detected. Specific growth rates were increased by nitrate during growth in batch culture. Culture pH strongly influenced the products of dissimilatory nitrate reduction. Nitrate was principally converted to nitrite at alkaline pH, whereas nitrous oxide was the major product of nitrate reduction when the bacteria were grown at pH 6.0. Growth yields were increased by nitrate in electron acceptor-limited chemostats, where nitrate was reduced to nitrite, showing that dissimilatory nitrate reduction was an energetically favorable process in P. acnes. Nitrate had little effect on the amounts of fermentation products formed, but molar ratios of acetate to propionate were higher in the nitrate chemostats. Low concentrations of nitrite (ca. 0.2 mM) inhibited growth of P. acnes in batch culture. The nitrite was slowly reduced to nitrous oxide, enabling growth to occur, suggesting that denitrification functions as a detoxification mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Dissimilatory nitrate reduction by Propionibacterium acnes.   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Propionibacterium acnes P13 was isolated from human feces. The bacterium produced a particulate nitrate reductase and a soluble nitrite reductase when grown with nitrate or nitrite. Reduced viologen dyes were the preferred electron donors for both enzymes. Nitrous oxide reductase was never detected. Specific growth rates were increased by nitrate during growth in batch culture. Culture pH strongly influenced the products of dissimilatory nitrate reduction. Nitrate was principally converted to nitrite at alkaline pH, whereas nitrous oxide was the major product of nitrate reduction when the bacteria were grown at pH 6.0. Growth yields were increased by nitrate in electron acceptor-limited chemostats, where nitrate was reduced to nitrite, showing that dissimilatory nitrate reduction was an energetically favorable process in P. acnes. Nitrate had little effect on the amounts of fermentation products formed, but molar ratios of acetate to propionate were higher in the nitrate chemostats. Low concentrations of nitrite (ca. 0.2 mM) inhibited growth of P. acnes in batch culture. The nitrite was slowly reduced to nitrous oxide, enabling growth to occur, suggesting that denitrification functions as a detoxification mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
A comparison was made of denitrification by Pseudomonas stutzeri, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Paracoccus denitrificans. Although all three organisms reduced nitrate to dinitrogen gas, they did so at different rates and accumulated different kinds and amounts of intermediates. Their rates of anaerobic growth on nitrate varied about 1.5-fold; concomitant gas production varied more than 8-fold. Cell yields from nitrate varied threefold. Rates of gas production by resting cells incubated with nitrate, nitrite, or nitrous oxide varied 2-, 6-, and 15-fold, respectively, among the three species. The composition of the gas produced also varied markedly: Pseudomonas stutzeri produced only dinitrogen; Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Paracoccus denitrificans produced nitrous oxide as well; and under certain conditions Pseudomonas aeruginosa produced even more nitrous oxide than dinitrogen. Pseudomonas stutzeri and Paracoccus denitrificans rapidly reduced nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide and were able to grow anaerobically when any of these nitrogen oxides were present in the medium. Pseudomonas aeruginosa reduced these oxides slowly and was unable to grow anaerobically at the expense of nitrous oxide. Furthermore, nitric and nitrous oxide reduction by Pseudomonas aeruginosa were exceptionally sensitive to inhibition by nitrite. Thus, although it has been well studied physiologically and genetically, Pseudomonas aeruginosa may not be the best species for studying the later steps of the denitrification pathway.  相似文献   

7.
A comparison was made of denitrification by Pseudomonas stutzeri, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Paracoccus denitrificans. Although all three organisms reduced nitrate to dinitrogen gas, they did so at different rates and accumulated different kinds and amounts of intermediates. Their rates of anaerobic growth on nitrate varied about 1.5-fold; concomitant gas production varied more than 8-fold. Cell yields from nitrate varied threefold. Rates of gas production by resting cells incubated with nitrate, nitrite, or nitrous oxide varied 2-, 6-, and 15-fold, respectively, among the three species. The composition of the gas produced also varied markedly: Pseudomonas stutzeri produced only dinitrogen; Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Paracoccus denitrificans produced nitrous oxide as well; and under certain conditions Pseudomonas aeruginosa produced even more nitrous oxide than dinitrogen. Pseudomonas stutzeri and Paracoccus denitrificans rapidly reduced nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide and were able to grow anaerobically when any of these nitrogen oxides were present in the medium. Pseudomonas aeruginosa reduced these oxides slowly and was unable to grow anaerobically at the expense of nitrous oxide. Furthermore, nitric and nitrous oxide reduction by Pseudomonas aeruginosa were exceptionally sensitive to inhibition by nitrite. Thus, although it has been well studied physiologically and genetically, Pseudomonas aeruginosa may not be the best species for studying the later steps of the denitrification pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Two of nine sulfate reducing bacteria tested,Desulfobulbus propionicus andDesulfovibrio desulfuricans (strain Essex 6), were able to grow with nitrate as terminal electron acceptor, which was reduced to ammonia. Desulfovibrio desulfuricans was grown in chemostat culture with hydrogen plus limiting concentrations of nitrate, nitrite or sulfate as sole energy source. Growth yields up to 13.1, 8.8 or 9.7 g cell dry mass were obtained per mol nitrate, nitrite or sulfate reduced, respectively. The apparent half saturation constants (K s) were below the detection limits of 200, 3 or 100 mol/l for nitrate, nitrite of sulfate, respectively. The maximum growth rates {ie63-1} raised from 0.124 h-1 with sulfate and 0.150 h-1 with nitrate to 0.193 h-1 with nitrite as electron acceptor. Regardless of the electron acceptor in the culture medium, cell extracts exhibited absorption maxima corresponding to cytochromec and desulfoviridin. Nitrate reductase was found to be inducible by nitrate or nitrite, whereas nitrite reductase was synthesized constitutively. The activities of nitrate and nitrite reductases with hydrogen as electron donor were 0.2 and 0.3 mol/min·mg protein, respectively. If limiting amounts of hydrogen were added to culture bottles with nitrate as electron acceptor, part of the nitrate was only reduced to the level of nitrite. In media containing nitrate plus sulfate or nitrite plus sulfate, sulfate reduction was suppressed.The results demonstrate that the ammonification of nitrate or nitrite can function as sole energy conserving process in some sulfate-reducing bacteria.  相似文献   

9.
Denitrification by Thiobacillus denitrificans "RT" strain was investigated using manometry and gas chromatography. 1. From nitrate, resting cells produced only nitrogen anaerobically with thiosulfate as the electron donor. The data suggest that nitrate was assimilated and dissimilated by the same nitrate reductase, assayed with benzyl-viologen as the electron donor. 2. From nitrite, whole cells produced nitric oxide, nitrous oxide and nitrogen, using thiosulfate as the electron donor; nitrogen was the final product of the reduction. Crude extract reduced nitrite to nitrogen with p-phenylene-diamine and dimethyl-p-phenylene diamine as the electron donors, and produced nitric oxide, nitrous oxide and nitrogen with tetramethyl-p-phenylene-diamine as the electron donor. Nitrite was reduced to nitric oxide and nitrous oxide by crude extract using ascorbate-phenazine methosulfate as the electron donor. 3. From nitric oxide, whole cells produced nitrous oxide and nitrogen using thiosulfate as the electron donor, nitrogen was the final reduction product. Nitric oxide was reduced to nitrous oxide by crude extract with the ascorbate-phenazine methosulfate system. 4. Whole cells reduced nitrous oxide to nitrogen with thiosulfate as the electron donor. It was not possible to detect any nitrous oxide reductase activity in crude extract. 5. A scheme was of denitrification by Thiobacillus denitrificans "RT" strain.  相似文献   

10.
In anaerobically grown Paracoccus denitrificans the dissimilatory nitrate reductase is linked to the respiratory chain at the level of cytochromes b. Electron transport to nitrite and nitrous oxide involves c-type cytochromes. During electron transport from NADH to nitrate one phosphorylation site is passed, whereas two sites are passed during electron transport from NADH to oxygen, nitrite and nitrous oxide. The presentation of a respiratory chain as a linear array of electron carriers gives a misleading picture of the efficiency of energy conservation since the location of the reductases is not taken into account. For the reduction of nitrite and nitrous oxide, protons are utilized from the periplasmic space, whereas for the reduction of oxygen and nitrate, protons are utilized from the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane. Evidence for two transport systems for nitrate was obtained. One is driven by the proton motive force; this system is used to initiate nitrate reduction. The second system is a nitrate-nitrite antiport system. A scheme for proton translocation and electron transport to nitrate, nitrite, nitrous oxide and oxygen is presented. The number of charges translocated across the membrane during flow of two electrons from NADH is the same for all nitrogenous oxides and is 67-71% of that during electron transfer to oxygen via cytochrome o. These findings are in accordance with growth yield studies. YMAX electron values determined in chemostat cultures for growth with various substrates and hydrogen acceptors are proportional to the number of charges translocated to these hydrogen acceptors during electron transport.  相似文献   

11.
Fundamental denitrification kinetic studies with Pseudomonas denitrificans   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fundamental kinetic studies on the reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and their mixtures were performed with a strain of Pseudomonas denitrificans (ATCC 13867). Methanol served as the carbon source and was supplied in excess (2:1 mole ratio relative to nitrate and/or nitrite). Nitrate and nitrite served as terminal electron acceptors as well as sources of nitrogen for biomass synthesis. The results were explained under the assumption that respiration is a growth-associated process. It was found that the sequence of complete reduction of nitrate to nitrogen gas is via nitrite and nitrous oxide.It was found that the specific growth rate of the biomass on either nitrate or nitrite follows Andrews inhibitory kinetics and nitrite is more inhibitory than nitrate. It was also found that the culture has severe maintenance requirements which can be described by Herbert's model, i.e., by self-oxidation of portions of the biomass. The specific maintenance rates at 30 degrees C and pH 7.1 were found to be equal to about 28% of the maximum specific growth rate on nitrate and 23% of the maximum specific growth rate on nitrite. Nitrate and nitrite were found to be involved in a cross-inhibitory noncompetitive kinetic interaction. The extent of this interaction is negligible when the presence of nitrite is low but is considerable when nitrite is present at levels above 15 mg/L.Studies on the effect of temperature have shown that the culture cannot grow at temperatures above 40 degrees C. The optimal temperature for nitrate or nitrite reduction was found to be about 38 degrees C. Using an Arrhenius expression to describe the effect of temperature on the specific growth rates, it was found that the activation energy for the use of nitrate by the culture is 8.6 kcal/mol and 7.21 kcal/mol for nitrite. Arrhenius-type expressions were also used in describing the effect of temperature on each of the parameters appearing in the specific growth rate expressions. Studies on the effect of pH at 30 degrees C have shown that the culture reduces nitrate optimally at a pH between 7.4 and 7.6, and nitrite at a pH between 7.2 and 7.3. (c) 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Citrobacter freundii, Paracoccus denitrificans and Pseudomonas stutzeri were grown either singly or in mixed culture in anaerobic nitrate or nitrite limited chemostats with formate and/or succinate as electron donors and carbon sources. C. freundii reduced nitrate or nitrite stoichiometrically to ammonia. Maximum molar growth yields for nitrate (nitrite) were 15.3 (9.9) g/mol for C. freundii on formate with succinate as carbon source, 15.3 (9.5) g/mol for Ps. stutzeri on succinate and 32.3 (20.4) g/mol for Pa. denitrificans on succinate. The almost identical growth yields indicate that the ATP output of the anaerobic processes in the nitrate (nitrite) ammonifying organism and Ps. stutzeri are nearly the same. In mixed cultures with either Ps. stutzeri or Pa. denitrificans, C. freundii was the best competitor for nitrate. These results show that in anaerobic environments C. freundii may compete successfully with denitrifying organisms.  相似文献   

13.
The molar yields (g cell/mol) forAlcaligenes faecalis, Pseudomonas stutzeri, Paracoccus denitrificans andPseudomonas perfectomarinus batch cultures, under nitrous oxide (N2O) as the electron acceptor, were 11.2, 8.2, 6.1 and 4.4, respectively.Paracoccus denitrificans andPseudomonas perfectomarinus, which had the slowest growth rates, gave the lowest yields. Large maintenance energy costs may be partially responsible for this. The growth efficiencies ofA. faecalis andPs. perfectomarinus on N2O indicate that the numbers of sites for oxidative phosphorylation in the electron transport system associated with N2O reduction are about 49% and 39% of those in the electron transport system associated with O2 respiration, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
(1) Under anaerobic conditions the respiratory chain in cells of Paracoccus denitrificans, from late exponential cultures grown anaerobically with nitrate as electron acceptor and succinate as carbon source, has been shown to reduce added nitrate via nitrite and nitrous oxide to nitrogen without any accumulation of these intermediates. (2) Addition of nitrous oxide to cells reducing nitrate strongly inhibited the latter reaction. The inhibition was reversed by preventing electron flow to nitrous oxide with either antimycin or acetylene. Electron flow to nitrous oxide thus resembles electron flow to oxygen in its inhibitory effect on nitrate reduction. In contrast, addition of nitrite to an anaerobic suspension of cells reducing nitrate resulted in a stimulation of nitrate reductase activity. Usually, addition of nitrite also partially overcame the inhibitory effect of nitrous oxide on nitrate reduction. The reason why added nitrous oxide, but not nitrite, inhibits nitrate reduction is suggested to be related to the higher reductase activity of the cells for nitrous oxide compared with nitrite. Explanations for the unexpected stimulation of nitrate reduction by nitrite in the presence or absence of added nitrous oxide are considered. (3) Nitrous oxide reductase was shown to be a periplasmic protein that competed with nitrite reductase for electrons from reduced cytochrome c. Added nitrous oxide strongly inhibited the reduction of added nitrite. (4) Nitrite reductase activity of cells was strongly inhibited by oxygen in the presence of physiological reductants, but nitrite reduction did occur in the presence of oxygen when isoascorbate plus N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine was the reductant. It is concluded that competition for available electrons by two oxidases, cytochrome aa3 and cytochrome o, severely restricted electron flow to the nitrite reductase (cytochrome cd). For this reason it is unlikely that the oxidase activity of this cytochrome is ever functional in cells. (5) The mechanism by which electron flow to oxygen or nitrous oxide inhibits nitrate reduction in cells has been investigated. It is argued that relatively small changes in the extent of reduction of ubiquinone, or of another component of the respiratory chain with similar redox potential, critically determine the capacity for reducing nitrate. The argument is based on: (i) the response of an anthroyloxystearic acid fluorescent probe that is sensitive to changes in the oxidation state of ubiquinone; (ii) consideration of the total rates of electron flow through ubiquinone both in the presence of oxygen and in the presence of nitrate under anaerobic conditions; (iii) use of relative extents of oxidation of b-type cytochromes as an indicator of ubiquinone redox state, especially the finding that b-type cytochrome of the antimycin-sensitive part of the respiratory chain is more oxidised in the presence of added nitrous oxide, which inhibits nitrate reduction, than in the presence of added nitrite which does not inhibit. Arguments against b- or c-type cytochromes themselves controlling nitrate reduction are given. (6) In principle, control on nitrate reduction could be exerted either upon electron flow or upon the movement of nitrate to the active site of its reductase. The observations that inverted membrane vesicles and detergent-treated cells reduced nitrate and oxygen simultaneously at a range of total rates of electron flow are taken to support the latter mechanism. The failure of an additional reductant, durohydroquinone, to activate nitrate reduction under aerobic conditions in the presence of succinate is also evidence that it is not an inadequate supply of electrons that prevents the functioning of nitrate reductase under aerobic conditions. (7) In inverted membrane vesicles the division of electron flow between nitrate and oxygen is determined by a competition mechanism, in contrast to cells. This change in behaviour upon converting cells to vesicles cannot be attributed to loss of cytochrome c, and therefore of oxidase activity, from the vesicles because a similar change in behaviour was seen with vesicles prepared from cells of a cytochrome c-deficient mutant.  相似文献   

15.
A synthetic growth medium was purified with the chelator 1,5-diphenylthiocarbazone to study the effects of copper on partial reactions and product formation of nitrite respiration in Pseudomonas perfectomarinus. This organism grew anaerobically in a copper-deficient medium with nitrate or nitrite as the terminal electron acceptor. Copper-deficient cells had high activity for reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and nitric oxide, but little activity for nitrous oxide reduction. High rates of nitrous oxide reduction were observed only in cells grown on a copper-sufficient (1 micro M) medium. Copper-deficient cells converted nitrate or nitrite initially to nitrous oxide instead of dinitrogen, the normal end product of nitrite respiration in this organism. In agreement with this was the finding that anaerobic growth of P. perfectomarinus with nitrous oxide as the terminal electron acceptor required copper. This requirement was not satisfied by substitution of molybdenum, zinc, nickel, cobalt, or manganese for copper. Reconstitution of nitrous oxide reduction in copper-deficient cells was rapid on addition of a small amount of copper, even though protein synthesis was inhibited. The results indicate an involvement of copper protein(s) in the last step of nitrite respiration in P. perfectomarinus. In addition we found that nitric oxide, a presumed intermediate of nitrite respiration, inhibited nitrous oxide reduction.  相似文献   

16.
Growth of Nitrosomonas europaea on hydroxylamine   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Abstract Hydroxylamine is an intermediate in the oxidation of ammonia to nitrite, but until now it has not been possible to grow Nitrosomonas europaea on hydroxylamine. This study demonstrates that cells of N. europaea are capable of growing mixotrophically on ammonia and hydroxylamine. The molar growth yield on hydroxylamine (4.74 g mol−1 at a growth rate of 0.03 h−1) was higher than expected. Aerobically growing cells of N. europaea oxidized ammonia to nitrite with little loss of inorganic nitrogen, while significant inorganic nitrogen losses occurred when cells were growing mixotrophically on ammonia and hydroxylamine. In the absence of oxygen, hydroxylamine was oxidized with nitrite as electron acceptor, while nitrous oxide was produced. Anaerobic growth of N. europaea on ammonium, hydroxylamine and nitrite could not be observed at growth rates of 0.03 h−1 and 0.01 h−1.  相似文献   

17.
15N tracer methods and gas chromatography coupled to an electron capture detector were used to investigate dissimilatory reduction of nitrate and nitrite by the rumen microbiota of a fistulated cow. Ammonium was the only 15N-labeled end product of quantitative significance. Only traces of nitrous oxide were detected as a product of nitrate reduction; but in experiments with nitrite, up to 0.3% of the added nitrogen accumulated as nitrous oxide, but it was not further reduced. Furthermore, when 13NO3- was incubated with rumen microbiota virtually no [13N]N2 was produced. Acetylene partially inhibited the reduction of nitrite to ammonium as well as the formation of nitrous oxide. It is suggested that in the rumen ecosystem nitrous oxide is a byproduct of dissimilatory nitrite reduction to ammonium rather than a product of denitrification and that the latter process is absent from the rumen habitat.  相似文献   

18.
Under anaerobic circumstances in the presence of nitrateParacoccus denitrificans is able to denitrify. The properties of the reductases involved in nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, nitric oxide reductase, and nitrous oxide reductase are described. For that purpose not only the properties of the enzymes ofP. denitrificans are considered but also those fromEscherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, andPseudomonas stutzeri. Nitrate reductase consists of three subunits: the subunit contains the molybdenum cofactor, the subunit contains the iron sulfur clusters, and the subunit is a special cytochromeb. Nitrate is reduced at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane and evidence for the presence of a nitrate-nitrite antiporter is presented. Electron flow is from ubiquinol via the specific cytochromeb to the nitrate reductase. Nitrite reductase (which is identical to cytochromecd 1) and nitrous oxide reductase are periplasmic proteins. Nitric oxide reductase is a membrane-bound enzyme. Thebc 1 complex is involved in electron flow to these reductases and the whole reaction takes place at the periplasmic side of the membrane. It is now firmly established that NO is an obligatory intermediate between nitrite and nitrous oxide. Nitrous oxide reductase is a multi-copper protein. A large number of genes is involved in the acquisition of molybdenum and copper, the formation of the molybdenum cofactor, and the insertion of the metals. It is estimated that at least 40 genes are involved in the process of denitrification. The control of the expression of these genes inP. denitrificans is totally unknown. As an example of such complex regulatory systems the function of thefnr, narX, andnarL gene products in the expression of nitrate reductase inE. coli is described. The control of the effects of oxygen on the reduction of nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide are discussed. Oxygen inhibits reduction of nitrate by prevention of nitrate uptake in the cell. In the case of nitrite and nitrous oxide a competition between reductases and oxidases for a limited supply of electrons from primary dehydrogenases seems to play an important role. Under some circumstances NO formed from nitrite may inhibit oxidases, resulting in a redistribution of electron flow from oxygen to nitrite.P. denitrificans contains three main oxidases: cytochromeaa 3, cytochromeo, and cytochromeco. Cytochromeo is proton translocating and receives its electrons from ubiquinol. Some properties of cytochromeco, which receives its electrons from cytochromec, are reported. The control of the formation of these various oxidases is unknown, as well as the control of electron flow in the branched respiratory chain. Schemes for aerobic and anaerobic electron transport are given. Proton translocation and charge separation during electron transport from various electron donors and by various electron transfer pathways to oxygen and nitrogenous oxide are given. The extent of energy conservation during denitrification is about 70% of that during aerobic respiration. In sulfate-limited cultures (in which proton translocation in the NADH-ubiquinone segment of the respiratory chain is lost) the extent of energy conservation is about 60% of that under substrate-limited conditions. These conclusions are in accordance with measurements of molar growth yields.  相似文献   

19.
The amount of energy that can be conserved via halorespiration by Desulfitobacterium dehalogenans JW/IU-DC1 was determined by comparison of the growth yields of cells grown with 3-chloro-4-hydroxyphenyl acetate (Cl-OHPA) and different electron donors. Cultures that were grown with lactate, pyruvate, formate, or hydrogen as an electron donor and Cl-OHPA as an electron acceptor yielded 3.1, 6.6, 1.6, and 1.6 g (dry weight) per mol of reduction equivalents, respectively. Fermentative growth on pyruvate yielded 14 g (dry weight) per mol of pyruvate oxidized. Pyruvate was not fermented stoichiometrically to acetate and lactate, but an excess of acetate was produced. Experiments with 13C-labeled bicarbonate showed that during pyruvate fermentation, approximately 9% of the acetate was formed from the reduction of CO2. Comparison of the growth yields suggests that 1 mol of ATP is produced per mol of acetate produced by substrate-level phosphorylation and that there is no contribution of electron transport phosphorylation when D. dehalogenans grows on lactate plus Cl-OHPA or pyruvate plus Cl-OHPA. Furthermore, the growth yields indicate that approximately 1/3 mol of ATP is conserved per mol of Cl-OHPA reduced in cultures grown in formate plus Cl-OHPA and hydrogen plus Cl-OHPA. Because neither formate nor hydrogen nor Cl-OHPA supports substrate-level phosphorylation, energy must be conserved through the establishment of a proton motive force. Pyruvate ferredoxin oxidoreductase, lactate dehydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase, and hydrogenase were localized by in vitro assays with membrane-impermeable electron acceptors and donors. The orientation of chlorophenol-reductive dehalogenase in the cytoplasmic membrane, however, could not be determined. A model is proposed, which may explain the topology analyses as well as the results obtained in the yield study.  相似文献   

20.
The major process that reduces nitrate levels in soils and water is denitrification, which converts nitrate and nitrite into gaseous forms of nitrogen, which are then released into the atmosphere. This study used membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS) to investigate denitrification in river water bacterial isolates supplied with nitrate and succinate as an energy source as well as in the total population by provision of different carbon compounds to untreated river water samples. Substantial variation was observed in the gases detected with nitrogen, nitrous oxide and nitric oxide all being produced by one or more of the isolates. The indigenous river population as a whole was found to respond very differently to the addition of different carbon sources. Peak nitrogen levels differed by nearly 1 mmol 1(-1) and nitrous oxide by approximately 0.5 mmol 1(-1) depending on which carbon source was supplied. Nitric oxide was only detected when glycerol was supplied as the carbon source. These results demonstrate the complex interactions involved in nitrogen cycling and suggest that with careful management it may be possible to stimulate particular consortia of micro-organisms to reduce more nitrate to harmless nitrogen rather than nitrous oxide, a known greenhouse gas.  相似文献   

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