Perchlorate and chlorate reduction by the Crenarchaeon Aeropyrum pernix and two thermophilic Firmicutes

MG Liebensteiner, MWH Pinkse… - Environmental …, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
MG Liebensteiner, MWH Pinkse, B Nijsse, PDEM Verhaert, N Tsesmetzis, AJM Stams
Environmental microbiology reports, 2015Wiley Online Library
This study reports the ability of one hyperthermophilic and two thermophilic microorganisms
to grow anaerobically by the reduction of chlorate and perchlorate. Physiological, genomic
and proteome analyses suggest that the C renarchaeon A eropyrum pernix reduces
perchlorate with a periplasmic enzyme related to nitrate reductases, but that it lacks a
functional chlorite‐disproportionating enzyme (Cld) to complete the pathway. A eropyrum
pernix, previously described as a strictly aerobic microorganism, seems to rely on the …
Summary
This study reports the ability of one hyperthermophilic and two thermophilic microorganisms to grow anaerobically by the reduction of chlorate and perchlorate. Physiological, genomic and proteome analyses suggest that the Crenarchaeon Aeropyrum pernix reduces perchlorate with a periplasmic enzyme related to nitrate reductases, but that it lacks a functional chlorite‐disproportionating enzyme (Cld) to complete the pathway. Aeropyrum pernix, previously described as a strictly aerobic microorganism, seems to rely on the chemical reactivity of reduced sulfur compounds with chlorite, a mechanism previously reported for perchlorate‐reducing Archaeoglobus fulgidus. The chemical oxidation of thiosulfate (in excessive amounts present in the medium) and the reduction of chlorite result in the release of sulfate and chloride, which are the products of a biotic–abiotic perchlorate reduction pathway in Ae. pernix. The apparent absence of Cld in two other perchlorate‐reducing microorganisms, Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans and Moorella glycerini strain NMP, and their dependence on sulfide for perchlorate reduction is consistent with the observations made on Ar. fulgidus. Our findings suggest that microbial perchlorate reduction at high temperature differs notably from the physiology of perchlorate‐ and chlorate‐reducing mesophiles and that it is characterized by the lack of a chlorite dismutase and is enabled by a combination of biotic and abiotic reactions.
Wiley Online Library
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果