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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1999, p. 4008-4013, Vol. 65, No. 9
Laboratoire de Physiologie et Ecologie
Microbiennes, Section Interfacultaire d'Agronomie,
Université Libre de Bruxelles c/o Institut Pasteur, B-1180,
Brussels, Belgium
Received 22 March 1999/Accepted 24 June 1999
In vitro ammonia-oxidizing bacteria are capable of oxidizing
hydrocarbons incompletely. This transformation is accompanied by
competitive inhibition of ammonia monooxygenase, the first key enzyme
in nitrification. The effect of hydrocarbon pollution on soil
nitrification was examined in situ. In a microcosm study, adding diesel
fuel hydrocarbon to an uncontaminated soil (agricultural unfertilized
soil) treated with ammonium sulfate dramatically reduced the amount of
KCl-extractable nitrate but stimulated ammonium consumption. In a soil
with long history of pollution that was treated with ammonium sulfate,
90% of the ammonium was transformed into nitrate after 3 weeks of
incubation. Nitrate production was twofold higher in the contaminated
soil than in the agricultural soil to which hydrocarbon was not added.
To assess if ammonia-oxidizing bacteria acquired resistance to
inhibition by hydrocarbon, the contaminated soil was reexposed to
diesel fuel. Ammonium consumption was not affected, but nitrate
production was 30% lower than nitrate production in the absence of
hydrocarbon. The apparent reduction in nitrification resulted from
immobilization of ammonium by hydrocarbon-stimulated microbial
activity. These results indicated that the hydrocarbon inhibited
nitrification in the noncontaminated soil (agricultural soil) and that
ammonia-oxidizing bacteria in the polluted soil acquired resistance to
inhibition by the hydrocarbon, possibly by increasing the affinity of
nitrifying bacteria for ammonium in the soil.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Nitrification and Autotrophic Nitrifying Bacteria
in a Hydrocarbon-Polluted Soil
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratoire de
Physiologie et Ecologie Microbiennes, Section Interfacultaire
d'Agronomie, Université Libre de Bruxelles c/o Institute
Pasteur, Rue Engeland 642, B-1180, Brussels, Belgium. Phone: 32 2 373 33 03. Fax: 32 2 3733309. E-mail:
upemulb{at}resulb.ulb.ac.be.
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