Hydroxylamine‐dependent anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) by “ Candidatus Brocadia sinica”


Publication

Citation
Oshiki et al. (2016). Environmental Microbiology 18 (9)
Names (1)
Subjects
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics Microbiology
Abstract
Summary Although metabolic pathways and associated enzymes of anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) of ‘ Ca . Kuenenia stuttgartiensis’ have been studied, those of other anammox bacteria are still poorly understood. reduction to NO is considered to be the first step in the anammox metabolism of ‘ Ca . K. stuttgartiensis’, however, ‘ Ca . Brocadia’ lacks the genes that encode canonical NO‐forming nitrite reductases (NirS or NirK) in its genome, which is different from ‘ Ca . K. stuttgartiensis’. Here, we studied the anammox metabolism of ‘ Ca . Brocadia sinica’. 15 N‐tracer experiments demonstrated that ‘ Ca . B. sinica’ cells could reduce to NH 2 OH, instead of NO, with as yet unidentified nitrite reductase(s). Furthermore, N 2 H 4 synthesis, downstream reaction of reduction, was investigated using a purified ‘ Ca . B. sinica' hydrazine synthase (Hzs) and intact cells. Both the ‘ Ca . B. sinica’ Hzs and cells utilized NH 2 OH and , but not NO and , for N 2 H 4 synthesis and further oxidized N 2 H 4 to N 2 gas. Taken together, the metabolic pathway of ‘ Ca . B. sinica’ is NH 2 OH‐dependent and different from the one of ‘ Ca . K. stuttgartiensis’, indicating metabolic diversity of anammox bacteria.
Authors
Oshiki, Mamoru; Ali, Muhammad; Shinyako‐Hata, Kaori; Satoh, Hisashi; Okabe, Satoshi
Publication date
2016-09-01
DOI
10.1111/1462-2920.13355 

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