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1.
Science ; 332(6034): 1163-6, 2011 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21127214

ABSTRACT

Life is mostly composed of the elements carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, sulfur, and phosphorus. Although these six elements make up nucleic acids, proteins, and lipids and thus the bulk of living matter, it is theoretically possible that some other elements in the periodic table could serve the same functions. Here, we describe a bacterium, strain GFAJ-1 of the Halomonadaceae, isolated from Mono Lake, California, that is able to substitute arsenic for phosphorus to sustain its growth. Our data show evidence for arsenate in macromolecules that normally contain phosphate, most notably nucleic acids and proteins. Exchange of one of the major bio-elements may have profound evolutionary and geochemical importance.


Subject(s)
Arsenates/metabolism , Arsenic/metabolism , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , Halomonadaceae/growth & development , Halomonadaceae/metabolism , Phosphates/metabolism , Phosphorus/metabolism , Arsenates/analysis , Arsenic/analysis , Arsenic/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/analysis , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , California , Culture Media , DNA, Bacterial/metabolism , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Halomonadaceae/cytology , Halomonadaceae/isolation & purification , Molecular Sequence Data , Phosphates/analysis , Phosphorus/analysis , Phosphorus/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Secondary Ion , Vacuoles/ultrastructure , Water Microbiology
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 76(14): 4633-9, 2010 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20511421

ABSTRACT

Red-pigmented biofilms grow on rock and cobble surfaces present in anoxic hot springs located on Paoha Island in Mono Lake. The bacterial community was dominated ( approximately 85% of 16S rRNA gene clones) by sequences from the photosynthetic Ectothiorhodospira genus. Scraped biofilm materials incubated under anoxic conditions rapidly oxidized As(III) to As(V) in the light via anoxygenic photosynthesis but could also readily reduce As(V) to As(III) in the dark at comparable rates. Back-labeling experiments with (73)As(V) demonstrated that reduction to (73)As(III) also occurred in the light, thereby illustrating the cooccurrence of these two anaerobic processes as an example of closely coupled arsenotrophy. Oxic biofilms also oxidized As(III) to As(V). Biofilms incubated with [(14)C]acetate oxidized the radiolabel to (14)CO(2) in the light but not the dark, indicating a capacity for photoheterotrophy but not chemoheterotrophy. Anoxic, dark-incubated samples demonstrated As(V) reduction linked to additions of hydrogen or sulfide but not acetate. Chemoautotrophy linked to As(V) as measured by dark fixation of [(14)C]bicarbonate into cell material was stimulated by either H(2) or HS(-). Functional genes for the arsenate respiratory reductase (arrA) and arsenic resistance (arsB) were detected in sequenced amplicons of extracted DNA, with about half of the arrA sequences closely related ( approximately 98% translated amino acid identity) to those from the family Ectothiorhodospiraceae. Surprisingly, no authentic PCR products for arsenite oxidase (aoxB) were obtained, despite observing aerobic arsenite oxidation activity. Collectively, these results demonstrate close linkages of these arsenic redox processes occurring within these biofilms.


Subject(s)
Arsenic/metabolism , Biofilms/growth & development , Ectothiorhodospiraceae/metabolism , Hot Springs/microbiology , Photosynthesis , California , Carbon Radioisotopes/metabolism , Cluster Analysis , DNA, Bacterial/chemistry , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/chemistry , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Ectothiorhodospiraceae/classification , Ectothiorhodospiraceae/genetics , Hydrogen/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Staining and Labeling , Sulfhydryl Compounds/metabolism
3.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 382(2): 298-302, 2009 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19285953

ABSTRACT

The haloalkaliphilic bacterium Alkalilimnicola ehrlichii is capable of anaerobic chemolithoautotrophic growth by coupling the oxidation of arsenite (As(III)) to the reduction of nitrate and carbon dioxide. Analysis of its complete genome indicates that it lacks a conventional arsenite oxidase (Aox), but instead possesses two operons that each encode a putative respiratory arsenate reductase (Arr). Here we show that one homolog is expressed under chemolithoautotrophic conditions and exhibits both arsenite oxidase and arsenate reductase activity. We also demonstrate that Arr from two arsenate respiring bacteria, Alkaliphilus oremlandii and Shewanella sp. strain ANA-3, is also biochemically reversible. Thus Arr can function as a reductase or oxidase. Its physiological role in a specific organism, however, may depend on the electron potentials of the molybdenum center and [Fe-S] clusters, additional subunits, or constitution of the electron transfer chain. This versatility further underscores the ubiquity and antiquity of microbial arsenic metabolism.


Subject(s)
Arsenate Reductases/metabolism , Ectothiorhodospiraceae/enzymology , Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Arsenate Reductases/classification , Arsenate Reductases/genetics , Ectothiorhodospiraceae/genetics , Genome, Bacterial , Molecular Sequence Data , Operon , Oxidoreductases/classification , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Phylogeny , Shewanella/enzymology , Shewanella/genetics
4.
Int J Syst Evol Microbiol ; 57(Pt 3): 504-512, 2007 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17329775

ABSTRACT

A facultative chemoautotrophic bacterium, strain MLHE-1(T), was isolated from Mono Lake, an alkaline hypersaline soda lake in California, USA. Cells of strain MLHE-1(T) were Gram-negative, short motile rods that grew with inorganic electron donors (arsenite, hydrogen, sulfide or thiosulfate) coupled with the reduction of nitrate to nitrite. No aerobic growth was attained with arsenite or sulfide, but hydrogen sustained both aerobic and anaerobic growth. No growth occurred when nitrite or nitrous oxide was substituted for nitrate. Heterotrophic growth was observed under aerobic and anaerobic (nitrate) conditions. Cells of strain MLHE-1(T) could oxidize but not grow on CO, while CH(4) neither supported growth nor was it oxidized. When grown chemoautotrophically, strain MLHE-1(T) assimilated inorganic carbon via the Calvin-Benson-Bassham reductive pentose phosphate pathway, with the activity of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (RuBisCO) functioning optimally at 0.1 M NaCl and at pH 7.3. Strain MLHE-1(T) grew over broad ranges of pH (7.3-10.0; optimum, 9.3), salinity (15-190 g l(-1); optimum 30 g l(-1)) and temperature (13-40 degrees C; optimum, 30 degrees C). Phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences placed strain MLHE-1(T) in the class Gammaproteobacteria (family Ectothiorhodospiraceae) and most closely related to Alkalispirillum mobile (98.5 %) and Alkalilimnicola halodurans (98.6 %), although none of these three haloalkaliphilic micro-organisms were capable of photoautotrophic growth and only strain MLHE-1(T) was able to oxidize As(III). On the basis of physiological characteristics and DNA-DNA hybridization data, it is suggested that strain MLHE-1(T) represents a novel species within the genus Alkalilimnicola for which the name Alkalilimnicola ehrlichii is proposed. The type strain is MLHE-1(T) (=DSM 17681(T)=ATCC BAA-1101(T)). Aspects of the annotated full genome of Alkalilimnicola ehrlichii are discussed in the light of its physiology.


Subject(s)
Gammaproteobacteria/classification , Gammaproteobacteria/metabolism , Nitrates/metabolism , Oxygen/metabolism , Arsenites/metabolism , Carbon Monoxide/metabolism , Chemoautotrophic Growth , Electrons , Gammaproteobacteria/growth & development , Gammaproteobacteria/ultrastructure , Genes, Bacterial , Heterotrophic Processes , Methane/metabolism , Phylogeny , Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase/metabolism
5.
Science ; 308(5726): 1305-8, 2005 May 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15919992

ABSTRACT

Searles Lake is a salt-saturated, alkaline brine unusually rich in the toxic element arsenic. Arsenic speciation changed from arsenate [As(V)] to arsenite [As(III)] with sediment depth. Incubated anoxic sediment slurries displayed dissimilatory As(V)-reductase activity that was markedly stimulated by H2 or sulfide, whereas aerobic slurries had rapid As(III)-oxidase activity. An anaerobic, extremely haloalkaliphilic bacterium was isolated from the sediment that grew via As(V) respiration, using either lactate or sulfide as its electron donor. Hence, a full biogeochemical cycle of arsenic occurs in Searles Lake, driven in part by inorganic electron donors.


Subject(s)
Arsenates/metabolism , Arsenites/metabolism , Bacteria, Anaerobic/isolation & purification , Bacteria, Anaerobic/metabolism , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Salts , Water Microbiology , Aerobiosis , Anaerobiosis , Bacteria, Anaerobic/classification , Bacteria, Anaerobic/growth & development , Bicarbonates/metabolism , California , Ecosystem , Electron Transport , Genes, rRNA , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Lactic Acid/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , Sodium Chloride , Sulfides/metabolism , Water/chemistry
6.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 70(11): 6428-34, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15528502

ABSTRACT

Periphyton (Cladophora sp.) samples from a suburban stream lacking detectable dissolved As were able to reduce added As(V) to As(III) when incubated under anoxic conditions and, conversely, oxidized added As(III) to As(V) with aerobic incubation. Both types of activity were abolished in autoclaved controls, thereby demonstrating its biological nature. The reduction of As(V) was inhibited by chloramphenicol, indicating that it required the synthesis of new protein. Nitrate also inhibited As(V) reduction, primarily because it served as a preferred electron acceptor to which the periphyton community was already adapted. However, part of the inhibition was also caused by microbial reoxidation of As(III) linked to nitrate. Addition of [14C]glucose to anoxic samples resulted in the production of 14CO2, suggesting that the observed As(V) reduction was a respiratory process coupled to the oxidation of organic matter. The population density of As(V)-reducing bacteria within the periphyton increased with time and with the amount of As(V) added, reaching values as high as approximately 10(6) cells ml(-1) at the end of the incubation. This indicated that dissimilatory As(V) reduction in these populations was linked to growth. However, As(V)-respiring bacteria were found to be present, albeit at lower numbers (approximately 10(2) ml(-1)), in freshly sampled periphyton. These results demonstrate the presence of a bacterial population within the periphyton communities that is capable of two key arsenic redox transformations that were previously studied in As-contaminated environments, which suggests that these processes are widely distributed in nature. This assumption was reinforced by experiments with estuarine samples of Cladophora sericea in which we detected a similar capacity for anaerobic As(V) reduction and aerobic As(III) oxidation.


Subject(s)
Anions/metabolism , Arsenic/metabolism , Bacteria/metabolism , Chlorophyta/metabolism , Ecosystem , Fresh Water/microbiology , Aerobiosis , Anaerobiosis , Bacteria/growth & development , Chlorophyta/growth & development , Nitrates/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction
7.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 70(5): 2741-7, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15128527

ABSTRACT

Anoxic bottom water from Mono Lake, California, can biologically reduce added arsenate without any addition of electron donors. Of the possible in situ inorganic electron donors present, only sulfide was sufficiently abundant to drive this reaction. We tested the ability of sulfide to serve as an electron donor for arsenate reduction in experiments with lake water. Reduction of arsenate to arsenite occurred simultaneously with the removal of sulfide. No loss of sulfide occurred in controls without arsenate or in sterilized samples containing both arsenate and sulfide. The rate of arsenate reduction in lake water was dependent on the amount of available arsenate. We enriched for a bacterium that could achieve growth with sulfide and arsenate in a defined, mineral medium and purified it by serial dilution. The isolate, strain MLMS-1, is a gram-negative, motile curved rod that grows by oxidizing sulfide to sulfate while reducing arsenate to arsenite. Chemoautotrophy was confirmed by the incorporation of H(14)CO(3)(-) into dark-incubated cells, but preliminary gene probing tests with primers for ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase did not yield PCR-amplified products. Alignment of 16S rRNA sequences indicated that strain MLMS-1 was in the delta-Proteobacteria, located near sulfate reducers like Desulfobulbus sp. (88 to 90% similarity) but more closely related (97%) to unidentified sequences amplified previously from Mono Lake. However, strain MLMS-1 does not grow with sulfate as its electron acceptor.


Subject(s)
Arsenates/metabolism , Deltaproteobacteria/classification , Deltaproteobacteria/isolation & purification , Fresh Water/microbiology , Sulfides/metabolism , Culture Media , DNA, Ribosomal/analysis , Darkness , Deltaproteobacteria/growth & development , Deltaproteobacteria/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidation-Reduction , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sodium Chloride
8.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 68(10): 4795-802, 2002 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12324322

ABSTRACT

Arsenite [As(III)]-enriched anoxic bottom water from Mono Lake, California, produced arsenate [As(V)] during incubation with either nitrate or nitrite. No such oxidation occurred in killed controls or in live samples incubated without added nitrate or nitrite. A small amount of biological As(III) oxidation was observed in samples amended with Fe(III) chelated with nitrolotriacetic acid, although some chemical oxidation was also evident in killed controls. A pure culture, strain MLHE-1, that was capable of growth with As(III) as its electron donor and nitrate as its electron acceptor was isolated in a defined mineral salts medium. Cells were also able to grow in nitrate-mineral salts medium by using H(2) or sulfide as their electron donor in lieu of As(III). Arsenite-grown cells demonstrated dark (14)CO(2) fixation, and PCR was used to indicate the presence of a gene encoding ribulose-1,5-biphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. Strain MLHE-1 is a facultative chemoautotroph, able to grow with these inorganic electron donors and nitrate as its electron acceptor, but heterotrophic growth on acetate was also observed under both aerobic and anaerobic (nitrate) conditions. Phylogenetic analysis of its 16S ribosomal DNA sequence placed strain MLHE-1 within the haloalkaliphilic Ectothiorhodospira of the gamma-PROTEOBACTERIA: Arsenite oxidation has never been reported for any members of this subgroup of the PROTEOBACTERIA:


Subject(s)
Arsenites/metabolism , Bacteria, Anaerobic/metabolism , Fresh Water/microbiology , Anaerobiosis , Bacteria, Anaerobic/classification , Bacteria, Anaerobic/growth & development , Bacteria, Anaerobic/isolation & purification , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/analysis , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/chemistry , Water Microbiology
9.
FEMS Microbiol Ecol ; 41(1): 59-67, 2002 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19709239

ABSTRACT

Abstract Bovine rumen fluid and slurried hamster feces completely reduced millimolar levels of arsenate to arsenite upon incubation under anoxic conditions. This activity was strongly inhibited by autoclaving or aerobic conditions, and partially inhibited by tungstate or chloramphenicol. The rate of arsenate reduction was faster in feces from a population of arsenate-watered (100 ppm) hamsters compared to a control group watered without arsenate. Using radioisotope methods, arsenate reductase activity in hamster feces was also detected at very low concentrations of added arsenate ( approximately 10 muM). Bacterial cultures were isolated from these materials, as well as from the termite hindgut, that grew using H(2) as their electron donor, acetate as their carbon source, and arsenate as their respiratory electron acceptor. The three cultures aligned phylogenetically either with well-established enteric bacteria, or with an organism associated with feedlot fecal wastes. Because arsenite is transported across the gut epithelium more readily than arsenate, microbial dissimilatory reduction of arsenate in the gut may promote the body's absorption of arsenic and hence potentiate its toxicity.

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