CONCENTRATION AND TRANSPORT OF NITRATE BY THE MAT-FORMING SULFUR BACTERIUM THIOPLOCA

FOSSING, H; GALLARDO, VA; JORGENSEN, BB; HUTTEL, M; NIELSEN, LP; SCHULZ, H; CANFIELD, DE; FORSTER, S; GLUD, RN; GUNDERSEN, JK; KUVER, J; RAMSING, NB; TESKE, A; THAMDRUP, B; ULLOA, O

Abstract

MARINE species of Thioploca occur over 3,000 km along the continental shelf off Southern Peru and North and Central Chile(1-4). These filamentous bacteria live in bundles surrounded by a common sheath and form thick mats on the sea floor under the oxygen-minimum zone in the upwelling region, at between 40 and 280 m water depth. The metabolism of this marine bacterium(5,6) remained a mystery until long after its discovery(1,7). We report here that Thioploca cells are able to concentrate nitrate to up to 500 mM in a liquid vacuole that occupies >80% of the cell volume. Gliding filaments transport this nitrate 5-10 cm down into the sediment and reduce it, with concomitant oxidation of hydrogen sulphide, thereby coupling the nitrogen and sulphur cycles in the sediment.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:A1995QU30400047 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NATURE
Volumen: 374
Número: 6524
Editorial: Nature Publishing Group
Fecha de publicación: 1995
Página de inicio: 713
Página final: 715
Notas: ISI