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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 2002, p. 2445-2452, Vol. 68, No. 5
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.5.2445-2452.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Illinois 62901
Received 6 November 2001/ Accepted 19 February 2002
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HS are thought to consist of a skeleton of alkyl or aromatic units cross-linked mainly by oxygen and nitrogen groups, with the major functional groups being carboxylic acid, phenolic and alcoholic hydroxyls, ketone, and quinone groups (27, 42). This structure allows HS to bind both hydrophobic and hydrophilic materials, and thus they play an important role in the fate and transport of heavy metals and contaminating hydrocarbons in the environment (9, 24, 35-37, 38, 46, 54). HS are redox-active compounds and can reduce metals with estimated reduction potentials of 0.5 to 0.7 eV (45). They have been demonstrated to transfer electrons from reduced inorganics (sulfide) and organics (ascorbic acid) to various heavy metals, nitroaromatics, and chlorinated solvents (3, 20, 21, 26, 37, 41, 43, 45, 48). This can have a major effect on the migration and toxicity of many of these compounds (14). It is thought that the redox-reactive components of HS that are involved in these reactions are the quinone moieties (20, 21, 28).
Although HS are ubiquitous, they were always considered inert refractory organic material, especially in anoxic environments. Recent research, however, has demonstrated that HS can in fact play an important role as electron sinks for anaerobic respiratory bacteria and fermentative bacteria, stimulating mineralization of complex organic carbon compounds in the absence of O2 (6, 7, 15, 28, 29). Electron spin resonance studies have confirmed that the quinone moieties are the redox-active components of the HS for these microbial reductive reactions (44), and the HS have been shown to act as soluble electron carriers between microorganisms and insoluble terminal electron acceptors such as Fe(III) oxides (28, 29). When the reduced HS interact with the Fe(III) oxides, they are reoxidized and can thus be recycled (28, 29).
More recently, it has been demonstrated that HS in the reduced form can also serve as suitable electron donors for anaerobic organisms growing on a variety of alternative electron acceptors, such as nitrate and fumarate. In this instance, the organisms obtain carbon from readily degradable limited sources, such as acetate, and simply use the reduced HS as an energy source. Such a metabolism gives these organisms a potential competitive advantage over other heterotrophs in the environment that may require a limited organic compound such as acetate as both a carbon and energy source, thus requiring significantly greater concentrations for growth. Prior studies have demonstrated that pure cultures of Fe(III)-reducing organisms such as Geobacter metallireducens, Geothrix fermentans, and Shewanella alga, which are known to be capable of dissimilatory HS reduction, could alternatively couple reduced HS oxidation to nitrate reduction (30). In addition, other known denitrifiers, such as Paracoccus denitrificans, which are not capable of either dissimilatory HS reduction or Fe(III) reduction could also use reduced HS as an electron donor for denitrification (30).
These studies indicate that reduced HS may play an important role as an electron donor in anaerobic environments, but the organisms primarily responsible for HS oxidation and the environmental relevance of this metabolism are currently unknown. In order to determine the ubiquity and diversity of organisms capable of HS oxidation, we enumerated HS-oxidizing populations in a broad spectrum of environments and isolated six new HS-oxidizing nitrate-reducing bacteria.
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All samples were freshly collected and transported directly back to the laboratory, where they were immediately assayed for HS-oxidizing, nitrate-reducing bacteria.
Medium and culturing conditions.
Standard anaerobic culturing techniques were used throughout (4, 25, 34). The media were boiled under N2-CO2 (80:20) to remove dissolved O2 and then dispensed into anaerobic pressure tubes and serum bottles under N2-CO2, capped with thick butyl rubber stoppers, and sterilized by autoclaving. The basal media used were either a bicarbonate-buffered freshwater medium (8) or a bicarbonate-buffered marine medium (16). The electron donor, 2,6-anthrahydroquinone disulfonate (AHDS) (5 mM), was prepared by adding an equivalent amount of 2,6-anthraquinone disulfonate (AQDS) to the anoxic medium and further gassing the medium with H2-CO2 (80:20, vol/vol) in the presence of palladium-covered aluminum chips as previously described (14). Sodium salt of acetate (0.1 mM) was added as a suitable carbon source, and nitrate (10 mM) was added as an electron acceptor.
Alternative electron donors were added from sterile anoxic aqueous stocks. Pure aromatic hydrocarbons (benzene, hexadecane, and toluene) were added directly (1 µl to 10 ml of medium). Electron acceptors were also added from anoxic aqueous stocks. Soluble Fe(III) was supplied as Fe(III) chelated with nitrilotriacetic acid [Fe(III)-NTA] (10 mM) (41). Mn(IV) was supplied as synthetic MnO2 that was prepared as described previously (31) to give a final concentration of 10 to 30 mM. Sulfur was supplied as a polysulfide solution prepared as previously outlined (53). All other electron acceptors were prepared as anoxic aqueous stocks of the sodium salts to give final concentrations of 10 mM.
Isolation of HS-oxidizing bacteria.
HS-oxidizing, nitrate-reducing enrichments were established by transferring 1-g subsamples from each of the freshly collected soil and sediment samples into 9 ml of prepared anoxic medium under a gas stream of N2-CO2. AHDS (5 mM) was the electron donor, and nitrate (10 mM) was the electron acceptor. Acetate (0.1 mM) was added as a suitable carbon source. Incubations were done at 30°C in the dark. Positive enrichments were identified by color change of the medium from red to tan as the AHDS was oxidized to AQDS and by microscopic examination. Once a positive enrichment was established, the HS-oxidizing culture was transferred (10% inoculum) into 9 ml of fresh anoxic medium. Isolated colonies were obtained from transfers of positive enrichments by the standard agar shake-tube technique using the medium outlined previously (8, 17). Similarly, some isolates (strains JJ, KC, and HA) were obtained directly from the highest positive dilution tube of the most-probable-number series of the Campus Lake, Indian Head, and Hanahan samples, respectively, using the standard agar shake-tube technique.
Most-probable-number counts.
Numbers of HS-oxidizing, nitrate-reducing bacteria were determined by three-tube most-probable-number counts with 5 mM AHDS as the electron donor in either the marine or freshwater basal medium, depending on the source of the samples. Sodium pyrophosphate (1%, wt/vol) was added to the first dilution tubes in the most-probable-number series to detach the cells from the sediment or soil particles. All most-probable-number tubes were incubated at room temperature in the dark for 60 days prior to analysis. Positives in the most-probable-number series were identified visually by color change of the medium from red to tan as the AHDS was oxidized to AQDS.
16S rRNA gene sequencing and analysis.
The 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences were generated as previously described (1, 17). Sequence entry and manipulation was performed with the MacVector 6.1 sequence analysis software program for the Macintosh (Oxford Molecular). Sequences of select 16S rRNAs were downloaded from the Ribosomal Database Project (33) and GenBank (5) into the computer program SeqApp (23). HS-oxidizing bacterial 16S rDNA sequences were added manually to the alignment using secondary-structure information for accurate sequence alignment. Distance, parsimony, and maximum-likelihood analyses of the aligned sequences were performed using PAUP* 4.0d65 (47). Bootstrap analysis was conducted on 100 replications using a heuristic search strategy to assess the confidence level of various clades.
GenBank accession numbers for sequences represented in Fig. 6 are as follows: Agrobacterium tumefaciens, M11223; Dechloromonas agitata, AF047462; Dechloromonas sp. strain MissR, AF170357; Dechloromonas aromatica strain RCB,
Y032610; Rhodocyclus tenuis, D16208; Azoarcus evansii, X77679; Pseudomonas stutzeri, U26262; Escherichia coli, J01859; Treponema pallidum, M88726; Bacillus subtilis, K00637; Stigmatella erecta, AJ233933; Geobacter humireducens, AF019932; Pseudomonas flavescens, U01916; Marinobacter articus, AF148811; Dechloromonas sp. strain JJ, AY032611; Agrobacterium sp. strain PB, AF482682; Azoarcus sp. strain HA, AF482683; Pseudomonas sp. strain BU, AF482684; Pseudomonas sp. strain NMX, AF482685; Marinobacter sp. strain SBS, AF482686; and strain KC, AF482687.
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FIG. 6. Phylogenetic tree of the 16S rDNA sequence data set resulting from distance analysis using the Jukes-Cantor correction. The same topology was obtained using either parsimony or maximum likelihood and was supported by bootstrap analysis.
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Analytical techniques.
AHDS and AQDS concentrations were determined spectrophotometrically as previously outlined (15, 28, 29). Nitrate concentrations were determined by ion chromatography of aqueous samples using a Dionex DX500 equipped with an AS9-SC column using a sodium carbonate (2 mM)-sodium bicarbonate (7.5 mM) mobile phase at a flow rate of 2 ml/min. Organic acid analysis concentrations were analyzed by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) with UV detection (Shimadzu SPD-10A) using an HL-75H+ cation exchange column (Hamilton 79476). The eluent was 0.016 N H2SO4 at a flow rate of 0.4 ml per min. N2 gas production was monitored by gas chromatography coupled to thermocouple detection using a Supelco Poapak N 80/100-mesh column and helium as the carrier gas. Growth of cultures on soluble electron acceptors was measured by increase in optical density at 600 nm or by direct microscopic count. Chlorite dismutase enzyme activity was determined by microassay using horseradish peroxidase (Sigma Chemical Corp.) coupled to dianisidine as an electron donor. In the presence of chlorite, a brown color is produced which can be read spectrophotometrically at a wavelength of 450 nm (J. D. Coates, unpublished data).
HS oxidation was determined as previously described (14) by backtitration of HS samples with Fe(III) for 15 min prior to analyzing for Fe(II) by the ferrozine assay (32).
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TABLE 1. Most-probable-number counts of HS oxidizersa
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Phenotypic characteristics.
In general, the HS-oxidizing isolates were gram-negative, nonfermenting facultative anaerobes. Morphologically, most of the isolates were motile short rods 0.5 µm in diameter by 2 µm in length (Fig. 1a). One of the isolates, strain KC, was morphologically distinct, being a long thin rod with cells 0.3 µm by 5.3 µm (Fig. 1b). Strain KC was also phenotypically distinct and showed no motility under any of the growth conditions tested, nor did it grow aerobically with any of the alternative media tested. Spores were not evident in wet-mount preparations of any of the isolates when observed by phase contrast microscopy, and no growth was observed in fresh AHDS-nitrate medium after pasteurization at 80°C for 3 min. All of the facultative anaerobic isolates could grow aerobically on L-broth.
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FIG. 1. Scanning electron micrographs of the humic substance-oxidizing isolates (a) strain JJ and (b) strain KC.
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FIG. 2. AHDS oxidation and growth of strain KC with nitrate (10 mM) as the electron acceptor and acetate (0.1 mM) as the carbon source.
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5C14H6O8S22- (AQDS) + N2 + 6H2O.
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FIG. 3. Total quinone concentration in culture broth, measured as AQDS concentration after abiotic air oxidation of samples collected at various time points during the growth of strain KC.
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FIG. 4. Oxidation of Aldrich brand humic substances by washed whole-cell suspensions of strain JJ with nitrate as the sole electron acceptor.
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TABLE 2. Compounds used as electron donors by HS-oxidizing isolates with nitrate (10 mM) as the electron acceptor
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FIG. 5. Nitrate reduction and transient nitrite formation by strain JJ while oxidizing AHDS with acetate as the carbon source.
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TABLE 3. Optimum growth conditions for individual HS-oxidizing isolates with acetate (10 mM) and nitrate (10 mM) as the sole electron donor and acceptor, respectively
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Only one of the isolates, strain JJ, was closely related to organisms previously demonstrated to be capable of HS oxidation. Strain JJ was a member of the Dechloromonas genus in the beta subclass of the Proteobacteria. Its closest relative is "Dechloromonas aromatica" strain RCB (97.7% 16S rDNA sequence similarity), a recently described hydrocarbon-oxidizing perchlorate reducer (13). In contrast to all other members of this genus, strain JJ did not grow by the reduction of either chlorate or perchlorate. In addition, active washed whole-cell suspensions of strain JJ did not dismutate chlorite into chloride and O2, a metabolic capability common to all known perchlorate-reducing bacteria (data not shown).
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Previous studies on the nitrate-dependent oxidation of HS demonstrated that many organisms, such as Geobacter species and Shewanella species, known to be capable of the dissimilatory reduction of humic materials could reverse this metabolism and oxidize reduced HS in the presence of a suitable electron acceptor (29). In contrast, some denitrifiers, such as Paracoccus denitrificans (30), and perchlorate reducers, such as Dechloromonas agitata (8), which are incapable of either dissimilatory HS reduction or Fe(III) reduction, did use reduced HS as an electron donor for carbon assimilation and growth, demonstrating that their metabolism is not simply a reversal of the reductive pathway. These previous studies were performed with AHDS as an analog for reduced HS (8, 30).
The fact that all of the isolates obtained in the present study could use reduced humic substances as electron donors indicates that AHDS is a suitable analog of HS for the isolation of nitrate-dependent HS oxidizers. This is similar to observations made in previous studies investigating the ubiquity and diversity of HS-reducing bacteria, in which it was demonstrated that AQDS could be substituted as a reliable analog for oxidized humic substances for the isolation and culturing of HS-reducing bacteria (15).
Interestingly, of the six genera represented by the isolates obtained in this study, only one, strain JJ, was a member of a genus previously demonstrated to be capable of HS oxidation coupled to nitrate reduction. Strain JJ is a member of the Dechloromonas genus in the beta subclass of the Proteobacteria, a group of organisms known primarily for their ability to grow by the dissimilatory reduction of chlorate and perchlorate [(per)chlorate] (1, 8, 17). This genus was only recently described (1), and together with the Dechlorosoma species, they represent the two dominant groups of perchlorate-reducing bacteria in the environment (1, 8, 12, 17; J. Pollock, L. A. Achenbach, and J. D. Coates, submitted for publication).
Previously we demonstrated that all members of the Dechloromonas genus tested were capable of coupling HS oxidation to either nitrate or (per)chlorate reduction (8, 13, 17). The role of the Dechloromonas species in environments uncontaminated with (per)chlorate is still unknown. However, recent studies have indicated that (per)chlorate-reducing bacteria are metabolically diverse (8, 13, 17) and can survive for extended periods when inoculated into environmental samples in the absence of an additional electron donor and acceptor (12). The ability of these organisms to grow by the oxidation of reduced HS further demonstrates their metabolic versatility.
In contrast to all other members of the Dechloromonas genus (1, 2, 8, 17), strain JJ did not grow by (per)chlorate reduction. In addition, strain JJ did not dismutate chlorite, a transient intermediate formed during the reductive metabolism of (per)chlorate (17, 49) into chloride and oxygen. As such, strain JJ represents the first member of the Dechloromonas genus that is incapable of (per)chlorate reduction. One phylogenetically close relative of the Dechloromonas genus (97.3% 16S sequence similarity to its closest relative, Dechloromonas sp. strain MissR) is the obligate anaerobic Fe(III) reducer Ferribacterium limneticum (1, 2, 19). Similar to strain JJ, previous studies indicated that this organism was also incapable of (per)chlorate reduction (1). Although this organism is phylogenetically closely related to strain JJ (99.5% similarity), extensive phenotypic differences between F. limneticum and strain JJ and phenotypic similarities between strain JJ and Dechloromonas species support the placement of strain JJ in the Dechloromonas genus. Whether or not F. limneticum is capable of growing by nitrate-dependent HS oxidation cannot be determined, as the culture and sole representative of this genus has been lost (D. Cummings, personal communication).
Most of the other isolates obtained in this study were closely related to known genera, such as Pseudomonas in the gamma Proteobacteria and Azoarcus in the beta Proteobacteria, not previously recognized for their ability to grow by humic substance oxidation. In contrast, one of the isolates, strain KC, was phylogenetically distinct and represented a new genus in its own right in the delta subclass of the Proteobacteria. Its closest relative was Stigmatella erecta (88.9% similarity), which is a member of the myxobacteria. Strain KC is morphologically similar to Stigmatella species in that it is a long thin rod (39). However, in contrast to S. erecta and most other myxobacteria (39), strain KC was an obligate anaerobe and did not form fruiting bodies under conditions of starvation.
Myxobacteria are commonly associated with environments of high humus content, such as soils, dung, and the bark of living and dead trees (39). Although their association with these environments has been partially explained by their general ability to decompose complex organics such as cellulose, it is also an environment where reduced HS and nitrate would be prevalent. As demonstrated in this study for strain KC and all the other HS-oxidizing isolates tested, the HS are not biodegraded as a carbon source by these organisms, but rather serve as an energy source for the assimilation of carbon from alternative sources. Whether or not myxobacteria in general can carry out nitrate-dependent HS oxidation in a similar manner is still unknown.
Environmental significance.
Although the geochemistry of HS has been studied for over a century, microbial interactions with HS, especially in the absence of oxygen, are only now being elucidated. HS are considered to be completely recalcitrant in the absence of dissolved oxygen; however, several studies have demonstrated that humic materials are slowly degraded by microbial populations in aerobic environments (references 50 and 52 and references therein). Degradation can be significantly enhanced by exposure of the HS to UV radiation from normal sunlight (52). This is because the absorption of UV by organic macromolecules such as humic and fulvic acids results in the production of biologically labile organic compounds via photolytic decomposition (50, 52). In addition, HS can cause reversible inactivation of microbial extracellular enzymatic activity by the binding of proteins to organic acids, resulting in the aggregation, complexation, and precipitation of the humic substance-protein complex (reference 51 and references therein).
Our and other recent studies of microbial interactions with humic substances in anaerobic environments indicate that HS may play an important role as electron shuttles in the microbial community as a result of their redox properties. The recent discoveries that the quinone moieties of HS can be microbially reduced (44) and that HS can alternatively act as electron acceptors for microbial respiration under strictly anaerobic conditions (15, 28, 29) further emphasize their importance for the mineralization of simple carbon compounds in the natural environment. Similarly, the redox activity of HS may also serve to shuttle electron equivalents formed during microbial fermentation onto terminal inorganic electron acceptors such as Fe(III) and result in the production of a more oxidized end product (6).
The results of the present study demonstrate that HS can also serve as suitable electron donors and energy sources for the assimilation of carbon. Whether or not this can be coupled to an autotrophic metabolism remains to be determined. Similarly, whether or not HS oxidation can compete with alternative metabolisms is still unknown. The environmental effect of the redox cycling of HS is uncertain; however, our previous studies on the effects of HS respiration on the reactivity of humic materials indicate that there is a significant difference in the geochemistry of microbially reduced and oxidized HS (14). Reduction of these compounds resulted in an extensive alteration of the molecular morphology as the colloidal structure of the humic substances collapsed to form small hollow particles, presumably as a result of the increase in the electron density of the molecule (14). In addition, the hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions of the HS also correlated to the redox state, and as the HS were reduced, the binding of positively charged cations was increased, while the absorption of hydrophobic hydrocarbons was decreased (14).
As humic materials are known to play an important role in the fate and transport of heavy metals and hydrocarbons in contaminated environments (9, 24, 35-37, 38, 46, 54), the microbial cycling of the redox state of the HS could potentially alter the nature and extent of these effects.
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