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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(46): 11820-11825, 2018 11 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30385636

ABSTRACT

When oxygen becomes limiting, denitrifying bacteria must prepare for anaerobic respiration by synthesizing the reductases NAR (NO3- → NO2-), NIR (NO2- → NO), NOR (2NO → N2O), and NOS (N2O → N2), either en bloc or sequentially, to avoid entrapment in anoxia without energy. Minimizing the metabolic burden of this precaution is a plausible fitness trait, and we show that the model denitrifier Paracoccus denitrificans achieves this by synthesizing NOS in all cells, while only a minority synthesize NIR. Phenotypic diversification with regards to NIR is ascribed to stochastic initiation of gene transcription, which becomes autocatalytic via NO production. Observed gas kinetics suggest that such bet hedging is widespread among denitrifying bacteria. Moreover, in response to oxygenation, P. denitrificans preserves NIR in the poles of nongrowing persister cells, ready to switch to anaerobic respiration in response to sudden anoxia. Our findings add dimensions to the regulatory biology of denitrification and identify regulatory traits that decrease N2O emissions.


Subject(s)
Denitrification/physiology , Nitrates/metabolism , Paracoccus denitrificans/metabolism , Bacteria/metabolism , Hypoxia/metabolism , Nitrous Oxide/metabolism , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism
2.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 79(2): 530-41, 2012 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22093000

ABSTRACT

Denitrifying prokaryotes are phylogenetically and functionally diverse. Little is known about the relationship between soil denitrifier community composition and functional traits. We extracted bacterial cells from three cultivated peat soils with contrasting native pH by density gradient centrifugation and investigated their kinetics of oxygen depletion and NO2 -, NO, N(2) O and N(2) accumulation during initially hypoxic batch incubations (0.5-1 µM O(2)) in minimal medium buffered at either pH 5.4 or 7.1 (2 mM glutamate, 2 mM NO3 -). The three communities differed strikingly in NO2 - accumulation and transient N(2) O accumulation at the two pH levels, whereas NO peak concentrations (24-53 nM) were similar across all communities and pH treatments. The results confirm that the communities represent different denitrification regulatory phenotypes, as indicated by previous denitrification bioassays with nonbuffered slurries of the same three soils. The composition of the extracted cells resembled that of the parent soils (PCR-TRFLP analyses of 16S rRNA genes, nirK, nirS and nosZ), which were found to differ profoundly in their genetic composition (Braker et al., ). Together, this suggests that direct pH response of denitrification depends on denitrifier community composition, with implications for the propensity of soils to emit N(2) O to the atmosphere.


Subject(s)
Denitrification/genetics , Soil Microbiology , Soil/chemistry , Biodiversity , Denitrification/physiology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Nitrogen Oxides/analysis , Nitrogen Oxides/metabolism
3.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 72(3): 407-17, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20370831

ABSTRACT

The N(2)O : N(2) product ratio of denitrification is negatively correlated with soil pH, but the mechanisms involved are not clear. We compared soils from field experiments where the pH had been maintained at different levels (pH 4.0-8.0) by liming (> or = 20 years), and quantified functional gene pools (nirS, nirK and nosZ), their transcription and gas kinetics (NO, N(2)O and N(2)) of denitrification as induced by anoxic incubation with and without a carbon substrate (glutamate). Denitrification in unamended soil appeared to be based largely on the activation of a pre-existing denitrification proteome, because constant rates of N(2) and N(2)O production were observed, and the transcription of functional genes was below the detection level. In contrast, glutamate-amended soils showed sharp peaks in the transcripts of nirS and nosZ, increasing the rates of denitrification and pH-dependent transient accumulation of N(2)O. The results indicate that the high N(2)O : N(2) product ratio at low pH is a post-transcriptional phenomenon, because the transcription rate of nosZ relative to that of nirS was higher at pH 6.1 than at pH 8.0. The most plausible explanation is that the translation/assembly of N(2)O reductase is more sensitive to low pH than that of the other reductases involved in denitrification.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/metabolism , Gene Pool , Nitrogen/metabolism , Soil Microbiology , Bacteria/genetics , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Nitrous Oxide/metabolism , Norway , Proteome , RNA, Bacterial/genetics , Soil/analysis , Sweden , Transcription, Genetic
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