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  • The American Society for Microbiology (ASM)  (3)
  • American Chemistry Society  (1)
  • 1
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    American Chemistry Society
    In:  Environmental Science & Technology, 43 (19). pp. 7245-7251.
    Publication Date: 2018-03-09
    Description: Diel cycles of dissolved cationic metal concentrations commonly occur in freshwater streams in apparent response to coincident cycles in water quality parameters (pH, O2, temperature). Hourly sampling of the Cd-contaminated Riou Mort (France) revealed large diel cycles in “total” dissolved Cd (232−357 nM; 〈0.45 μm) and “truly” dissolved Cd (56−297 nM; 〈0.02 μm) which were strongly correlated with changes in water pH. Using measured fluxes, a dissolved O2 model was constructed that indicated that benthic metabolic activities, respiration and photosynthesis, were responsible for the diel O2 (and thus, CO2 and pH) variation in the stream. However, microsensor measurements also showed that the pH changes occurred at the biofilm interface earlier than in the bulk water column. This difference in timing was reflected in the Cd dynamics, where pH-controlled sorption effects caused Cd partitioning from the truly dissolved pool onto the biofilm in the morning, and from the truly dissolved pool onto large colloids (0.02−0.45 μm) later in the day. Because this process causes large changes in the bioavailable Cd fraction, it has significant implications for Cd toxicity in freshwater streams. This study demonstrates the profound control of benthic microbiological processes on the cycling of heavy metals in aquatic systems.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2015-02-28
    Description: Before the Earth's complete oxygenation (0.58 to 0.55 billion years [Ga] ago), the photic zone of the Proterozoic oceans was probably redox stratified, with a slightly aerobic, nutrient-limited upper layer above a light-limited layer that tended toward euxinia. In such oceans, cyanobacteria capable of both oxygenic and sulfide-driven anoxygenic photosynthesis played a fundamental role in the global carbon, oxygen, and sulfur cycle. We have isolated a cyanobacterium, Pseudanabaena strain FS39, in which this versatility is still conserved, and we show that the transition between the two photosynthetic modes follows a surprisingly simple kinetic regulation controlled by this organism's affinity for H 2 S. Specifically, oxygenic photosynthesis is performed in addition to anoxygenic photosynthesis only when H 2 S becomes limiting and its concentration decreases below a threshold that increases predictably with the available ambient light. The carbon-based growth rates during oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis were similar. However, Pseudanabaena FS39 additionally assimilated NO 3 – during anoxygenic photosynthesis. Thus, the transition between anoxygenic and oxygenic photosynthesis was accompanied by a shift of the C/N ratio of the total bulk biomass. These mechanisms offer new insights into the way in which, despite nutrient limitation in the oxic photic zone in the mid-Proterozoic oceans, versatile cyanobacteria might have promoted oxygenic photosynthesis and total primary productivity, a key step that enabled the complete oxygenation of our planet and the subsequent diversification of life.
    Print ISSN: 0099-2240
    Electronic ISSN: 1098-5336
    Topics: Biology
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2016-06-14
    Description: The Pacific white shrimp ( Litopenaeus vannamei ) is widely used in aquaculture, where it is reared at high stocking densities, temperatures, and nutrient concentrations. Here we report that adult L. vannamei shrimp emit the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N 2 O) at an average rate of 4.3 nmol N 2 O/individual x h, which is 1 to 2 orders of magnitude higher than previously measured N 2 O emission rates for free-living aquatic invertebrates. Dissection, incubation, and inhibitor experiments with specimens from a shrimp farm in Germany indicated that N 2 O is mainly produced in the animal's gut by microbial denitrification. Microsensor measurements demonstrated that the gut interior is anoxic and nearly neutral and thus is favorable for denitrification by ingested bacteria. Dinitrogen (N 2 ) and N 2 O accounted for 64% and 36%, respectively, of the nitrogen gas flux from the gut, suggesting that the gut passage is too fast for complete denitrification to be fully established. Indeed, shifting the rearing water bacterial community, a diet component of shrimp, from oxic to anoxic conditions induced N 2 O accumulation that outlasted the gut passage time. Shrimp-associated N 2 O production was estimated to account for 6.5% of total N 2 O production in the shrimp farm studied here and to contribute to the very high N 2 O supersaturation measured in the rearing tanks (2,099%). Microbial N 2 O production directly associated with aquacultured animals should be implemented into life cycle assessments of seafood production. IMPORTANCE The most widely used shrimp species in global aquaculture, Litopenaeus vannamei , is shown to emit the potent greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N 2 O) at a particularly high rate. Detailed experiments reveal that N 2 O is produced in the oxygen-depleted gut of the animal by bacteria that are part of the shrimp diet. Upon ingestion, these bacteria experience a shift from oxic to anoxic conditions and therefore switch their metabolism to the anaerobic denitrification process, which produces N 2 O as an intermediate and dinitrogen (N 2 ) gas as an end product. The N 2 O/N 2 production ratio is unusually high in the shrimp gut, because denitrification cannot be fully established during the short gut passage time of food-associated bacteria. Nitrous oxide emission directly mediated by L. vannamei contributes significantly to the overall N 2 O emission from aquaculture facilities.
    Print ISSN: 0099-2240
    Electronic ISSN: 1098-5336
    Topics: Biology
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-07-18
    Description: Filamentous large sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (FLSB) of the family Beggiatoaceae are globally distributed aquatic bacteria that can control geochemical fluxes from the sediment to the water column through their metabolic activity. FLSB mats from hydrothermal sediments of Guaymas Basin, Mexico, typically have a "fried-egg" appearance, with orange filaments dominating near the center and wider white filaments at the periphery, likely reflecting areas of higher and lower sulfide fluxes, respectively. These FLSB store large quantities of intracellular nitrate that they use to oxidize sulfide. By applying a combination of 15 N-labeling techniques and genome sequence analysis, we demonstrate that the white FLSB filaments were capable of reducing their intracellular nitrate stores to both nitrogen gas and ammonium by denitrification and dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA), respectively. On the other hand, our combined results show that the orange filaments were primarily capable of DNRA. Microsensor profiles through a laboratory-incubated white FLSB mat revealed a 2- to 3-mm vertical separation between the oxic and sulfidic zones. Denitrification was most intense just below the oxic zone, as shown by the production of nitrous oxide following exposure to acetylene, which blocks nitrous oxide reduction to nitrogen gas. Below this zone, a local pH maximum coincided with sulfide oxidation, consistent with nitrate reduction by DNRA. The balance between internally and externally available electron acceptors (nitrate) and electron donors (reduced sulfur) likely controlled the end product of nitrate reduction both between orange and white FLSB mats and between different spatial and geochemical niches within the white FLSB mat. IMPORTANCE Whether large sulfur bacteria of the family Beggiatoaceae reduce NO 3 – to N 2 via denitrification or to NH 4 + via DNRA has been debated in the literature for more than 25 years. We resolve this debate by showing that certain members of the Beggiatoaceae use both metabolic pathways. This is important for the ecological role of these bacteria, as N 2 production removes bioavailable nitrogen from the ecosystem, whereas NH 4 + production retains it. For this reason, the topic of environmental controls on the competition for NO 3 – between N 2 -producing and NH 4 + -producing bacteria is of great scientific interest. Recent experiments on the competition between these two types of microorganisms have demonstrated that the balance between electron donor and electron acceptor availability strongly influences the end product of NO 3 – reduction. Our results suggest that this is also the case at the even more fundamental level of enzyme system regulation within a single organism.
    Print ISSN: 0099-2240
    Electronic ISSN: 1098-5336
    Topics: Biology
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