Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2001, p. 4694-4700, Vol. 67, No. 10
0099-2240/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.10.4694-4700.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Department of Plant Science, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N2, Canada
Received 5 June 2001/Accepted 31 July 2001
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus is an
N2-fixing endophyte isolated from sugarcane. G.
diazotrophicus was grown on solid medium at atmospheric partial
O2 pressures (pO2) of 10, 20, and 30 kPa for 5 to 6 days. Using a flowthrough gas exchange system, nitrogenase activity and respiration rate were then measured at a range of atmospheric pO2 (5 to 60 kPa). Nitrogenase activity was
measured by H2 evolution in N2-O2
and in Ar-O2, and respiration rate was measured by
CO2 evolution in N2-O2. To validate
the use of H2 production as an assay for nitrogenase
activity, a non-N2-fixing (Nif
) mutant of
G. diazotrophicus was tested and found to have a low rate of uptake hydrogenase (Hup+) activity
(0.016 ± 0.009 µmol of H2 1010
cells
1 h
1) when incubated in an atmosphere
enriched in H2. However, Hup+ activity was not
detectable under the normal assay conditions used in our experiments.
G. diazotrophicus fixed nitrogen at all atmospheric
pO2 tested. However, when the assay atmospheric
pO2 was below the level at which the colonies had been
grown, nitrogenase activity was decreased. Optimal atmospheric
pO2 for nitrogenase activity was 0 to 20 kPa above the
pO2 at which the bacteria had been grown. As atmospheric
pO2 was increased in 10-kPa steps to the highest levels (40 to 60 kPa), nitrogenase activity decreased in a stepwise manner.
Despite the decrease in nitrogenase activity as atmospheric
pO2 was increased, respiration rate increased marginally. A
large single-step increase in atmospheric pO2 from 20 to 60 kPa caused a rapid 84% decrease in nitrogenase activity. However, upon
returning to 20 kPa of O2, 80% of nitrogenase activity was recovered within 10 min, indicating a "switch-off/switch-on"
O2 protection mechanism of nitrogenase activity. Our study
demonstrates that colonies of G. diazotrophicus can fix
N2 at a wide range of atmospheric pO2 and can
adapt to maintain nitrogenase activity in response to both long-term
and short-term changes in atmospheric pO2.
This article has been cited by other articles:
| J. Bacteriol. | Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. | Eukaryot. Cell | All ASM Journals |
|---|