Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen

Despite the environmental significance of microbial manganese reduction, the molecular mechanism of microbial manganese respiration remains poorly understood. Soluble Mn(III) has been recently found to be a dominant soluble species in aquatic systems, yet little is known about the identity of microb...

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Main Author: Szeinbaum, Nadia Heliana
Other Authors: DiChristina, Thomas
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53407
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-534072015-06-27T03:39:48ZRole of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogenSzeinbaum, Nadia HelianaShewanellaMetal reductionManganeseAnaerobic ammonium oxidationDespite the environmental significance of microbial manganese reduction, the molecular mechanism of microbial manganese respiration remains poorly understood. Soluble Mn(III) has been recently found to be a dominant soluble species in aquatic systems, yet little is known about the identity of microbial populations catalyzing Mn(III) reduction in the environment nor the molecular mechanism of Mn(III) respiration. In this research, a suite of Mn(III) reduction-deficient mutant strains were isolated, including Mn(III) reduction-deficient mutant strain Mn3-1 that also displayed the ability to reduce soluble organic-Fe(III), but not solid Fe(III) oxides, demonstrating for the first time that the reduction of soluble organic-Fe(III) and solid Fe(III) oxides proceed through electron transport pathways with at least one distinct component. This work also shows that the electron transport pathway for Mn(III) reduction in S. oneidensis shares many of the electron transport components of Fe(III) and Mn(IV) reduction pathways and that Mn(IV) reduction to Mn(II) proceeds step-wise through two one-electron transfer reactions with Mn(III) as a transient intermediate. Finally, sediment incubations were carried out to enrich for NH4+ oxidizing- Mn(III) reducing consortia. The Mn(III) reducing consortium was found to be dominated by an electrogenic Ochrobactrum sp. and a Shewanella sp. The isolated Shewanella strain is able to oxidize acetate with Mn(III) as electron acceptor, an activity never observed before in a metal-reducing member of the Shewanella genus.Georgia Institute of TechnologyDiChristina, Thomas2015-06-08T18:10:13Z2015-06-09T05:30:06Z2014-052014-01-13May 20142015-06-08T18:10:13ZDissertationapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/53407en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Shewanella
Metal reduction
Manganese
Anaerobic ammonium oxidation

spellingShingle Shewanella
Metal reduction
Manganese
Anaerobic ammonium oxidation

Szeinbaum, Nadia Heliana
Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
description Despite the environmental significance of microbial manganese reduction, the molecular mechanism of microbial manganese respiration remains poorly understood. Soluble Mn(III) has been recently found to be a dominant soluble species in aquatic systems, yet little is known about the identity of microbial populations catalyzing Mn(III) reduction in the environment nor the molecular mechanism of Mn(III) respiration. In this research, a suite of Mn(III) reduction-deficient mutant strains were isolated, including Mn(III) reduction-deficient mutant strain Mn3-1 that also displayed the ability to reduce soluble organic-Fe(III), but not solid Fe(III) oxides, demonstrating for the first time that the reduction of soluble organic-Fe(III) and solid Fe(III) oxides proceed through electron transport pathways with at least one distinct component. This work also shows that the electron transport pathway for Mn(III) reduction in S. oneidensis shares many of the electron transport components of Fe(III) and Mn(IV) reduction pathways and that Mn(IV) reduction to Mn(II) proceeds step-wise through two one-electron transfer reactions with Mn(III) as a transient intermediate. Finally, sediment incubations were carried out to enrich for NH4+ oxidizing- Mn(III) reducing consortia. The Mn(III) reducing consortium was found to be dominated by an electrogenic Ochrobactrum sp. and a Shewanella sp. The isolated Shewanella strain is able to oxidize acetate with Mn(III) as electron acceptor, an activity never observed before in a metal-reducing member of the Shewanella genus.
author2 DiChristina, Thomas
author_facet DiChristina, Thomas
Szeinbaum, Nadia Heliana
author Szeinbaum, Nadia Heliana
author_sort Szeinbaum, Nadia Heliana
title Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
title_short Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
title_full Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
title_fullStr Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
title_full_unstemmed Role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
title_sort role of microbial manganese respiration in the anaerobic cycling of nitrogen
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/53407
work_keys_str_mv AT szeinbaumnadiaheliana roleofmicrobialmanganeserespirationintheanaerobiccyclingofnitrogen
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