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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2008, p. 251-258, Vol. 74, No. 1
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01580-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Growth of Thermophilic and Hyperthermophilic Fe(III)-Reducing Microorganisms on a Ferruginous Smectite as the Sole Electron Acceptor
Kazem Kashefi,1*
Evgenya S. Shelobolina,2
W. Crawford Elliott,3 and
Derek R. Lovley4
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824,1
Department of Geology and Geophysics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706,2
Department of Geosciences, Georgia State University, P.O. Box 4105, Atlanta, Georgia 30302-4105,3
Department of Microbiology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 010034
Received 11 July 2007/
Accepted 26 October 2007

ABSTRACT
Recent studies have suggested that the structural Fe(III) within
phyllosilicate minerals, including smectite and illite, is an
important electron acceptor for Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms
in sedimentary environments at moderate temperatures. The reduction
of structural Fe(III) by thermophiles, however, has not previously
been described. A wide range of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic
Archaea and
Bacteria from marine and freshwater environments
that are known to reduce poorly crystalline Fe(III) oxides were
tested for their ability to reduce structural (octahedrally
coordinated) Fe(III) in smectite (SWa-1) as the sole electron
acceptor. Two out of the 10 organisms tested,
Geoglobus ahangari and
Geothermobacterium ferrireducens, were not able to conserve
energy to support growth by reduction of Fe(III) in SWa-1 despite
the fact that both organisms were originally isolated with solid-phase
Fe(III) as the electron acceptor. The other organisms tested
were able to grow on SWa-1 and reduced 6.3 to 15.1% of the Fe(III).
This is 20 to 50% less than the reported amounts of Fe(III)
reduced in the same smectite (SWa-1) by mesophilic Fe(III) reducers.
Two organisms,
Geothermobacter ehrlichii and archaeal strain
140, produced copious amounts of an exopolysaccharide material,
which may have played an active role in the dissolution of the
structural iron in SWa-1 smectite. The reduction of structural
Fe(III) in SWa-1 by archaeal strain 140 was studied in detail.
Microbial Fe(III) reduction was accompanied by an increase in
interlayer and octahedral charges and some incorporation of
potassium and magnesium into the smectite structure. However,
these changes in the major element chemistry of SWa-1 smectite
did not result in the formation of an illite-like structure,
as reported for a mesophilic Fe(III) reducer. These results
suggest that thermophilic Fe(III)-reducing organisms differ
in their ability to reduce and solubilize structural Fe(III)
in SWa-1 smectite and that SWa-1 is not easily transformed to
illite by these organisms.

INTRODUCTION
Dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction has an important influence on
the geochemistry of both moderate-temperature (8 to 42°C)
and hot (42 to 121°C) environments (
27,
28). In freshwater
and marine sediments and submerged soils, mesophilic Fe(III)-reducing
organisms are responsible for the anaerobic oxidation of a substantial
portion of organic carbon and often play an important role in
the bioremediation of organic and metal contaminants at moderate
temperatures (
26). In hot anaerobic environments, such as the
deep continental subsurface and in marine and terrestrial hydrothermal
zones, hyperthermophilic microorganisms can oxidize hydrogen
and metabolize short- and long-chain organic acids and aromatic
compounds to carbon dioxide by using Fe(III) as the electron
acceptor (
12,
14,
18,
27,
53,
54). All hyperthermophiles available
in pure culture that have been tested to date can reduce Fe(III),
suggesting that the ability to reduce Fe(III) is a highly conserved
characteristic of hyperthermophilic microorganisms (
12-
18,
27,
29,
53,
56).
Recent studies suggest that the two main sources of Fe(III) in sedimentary environments are ferrihydrite and Fe(III)-bearing phyllosilicates including the iron-rich smectite SWa-1 (hereinafter SWa-1) (28, 51). The addition of both ferrihydrite and SWa-1 (31, 33, 46) to methanogenic sediments promotes the activity of indigenous Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms and switches the terminal electron-accepting process in these sediments from methane production to Fe(III) reduction.
Fe(III) hydroxides have been the focus of most studies of microbial Fe(III) reduction (26), and the importance of Fe(III)-bearing phyllosilicates for Fe(III) respiration has only recently been recognized (28, 51). Thus far, structural Fe(III) reduction has been tested only in mesophilic microorganisms (4, 6, 7, 21, 23, 25, 45, 47, 50, 58).
Here, we report on the potential for the microbial reduction of structural Fe(III) in SWa-1 by various thermophilic and hyperthermophilic Archaea and Bacteria, originally isolated with Fe(III) oxide as the terminal electron acceptor, from a variety of hot environments. The results suggest that phyllosilicates can serve as an electron acceptor for the growth of Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms in sedimentary environments at elevated temperatures. However, the conversion of smectite to illite as previously reported for the mesophilic Shewanella oneidensis (19) was not observed.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Sources of organisms and culture conditions.
The microbial strains used in this study are listed in Table
1. They were originally enriched and isolated with poorly crystalline
Fe(III) oxide (
30) as the sole electron acceptor, from a wide
variety of hydrothermal environments. Strict anaerobic culturing
techniques were used throughout (
1,
37). Gases were passed through
a column of hot copper filings to remove traces of oxygen. Strain
121 (
16); strains 136, 139, 140, 296, 297, and 301 and
Geothermobacter ehrlichii (
13); and
Geoglobus ahangari (
18) were grown in modified
marine enrichment medium (
18), supplemented with the following
(per liter): Difco yeast extract, 0.10 g; Na
2SeO
4, 0.02 g; vitamin
mixture (
32), 10 ml; trace mineral solution (
41), 10 ml.
Geothermobacterium ferrireducens was grown in freshwater enrichment medium (
15)
containing the following components (per liter): poorly crystalline
Fe(III) oxide, 100 mmol/liter; MgCl
2·6H
2O, 0.33 g; CaCl
2·2H
2O,
0.33 g; KCl, 0.33 g; KH
2PO
4, 0.33 g; NH
4Cl, 0.25 g; NaHCO
3,
2.5 g; Na
2SeO
4, 100 µM; vitamin solution (
32), 10 ml;
trace mineral solution (
32), 10 ml. The culture medium (10 ml)
was dispensed into 26-ml anaerobic pressure tubes (Bellco Glass,
Inc., Vineland, NJ) and sparged with oxygen-free H
2-CO
2 (80:20%,
vol/vol) gas for 12 to 15 min to remove dissolved oxygen. The
tubes were then sealed with thick butyl rubber stoppers and
autoclaved prior to medium supplementation with 0.25 mM
L-cysteine-HCl
and 1.3 mM FeCl
2·4H
2O (from concentrated anaerobic stock
solutions). The final pH of the medium was ca. 6.8 to 7.0 under
either N
2-CO
2 (in the case of
G. ehrlichii) or H
2-CO
2 (80:20%,
vol/vol, 101 kPa) atmosphere (at room temperature).
In order to determine the ability of the strains to use structural
Fe(III) of smectite as the terminal electron acceptor, poorly
crystalline Fe(III) oxide was omitted from the medium. The well-characterized
ferruginous smectite SWa-1, from Grant County, WA (Source Clays
Repository of the Clay Minerals Society), which has a nearly
ideal formula and lacks significant amounts of impurities, was
used as a source of structural Fe(III). The composition of SWa-1
shows significant amount of Fe(III) in the octahedral sheet:
[Na
0.87(Si
7.29Al
0.62)(Fe
3+2.67Fe
2+0.01Al
1.08Mg
0.23)O
20(OH)
4]
(
34). SWa-1 was prepared as previously described (
47) and contained
2,869 mmol Fe(III)/g and 0.016 mmol Fe(II)/g (dry weight). SWa-1
was added from concentrated anaerobic and sterile stock solution
at the particle load of 2.84 g/liter, which corresponded to
a final concentration of 9.2 mmol/liter Fe(III). The medium
was then inoculated with 10% of the culture (freshly grown to
late log phase) to be evaluated and was incubated in the dark
and without agitation. With the exception of
G. ehrlichii, which
was grown with
DL-malate (10 mM) as the electron donor, all
other organisms were grown with hydrogen as the electron donor
and structural Fe(III) in SWa-1 as the sole electron acceptor
(Table
2). All cultures were incubated at their optimal temperature
for growth. Strain 121 was incubated at both 105°C (optimal
temperature) and 115°C, in order to be able to compare the
results of the two different incubation temperatures. Growth
studies were initiated with a 10% inoculum of a freshly grown
culture that had previously been transferred twice in a medium
with H
2 as the electron donor and SWa-1 as the sole electron
acceptor. The incubation period for each strain was determined
when no further increase in cell number and no further increase
in Fe(II) production were observed at its optimum growth temperature.
Cell growth and production of Fe(II) were monitored as described
below.
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TABLE 2. Results of structural Fe(III) reduction by thermophilic and hyperthermophilic Fe(III)-reducing organisms in the third successive 10% transfera
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Measurement of Fe(III) reduction.
Previous studies have shown that both 0.5 N HCl and dilute HF
can completely extract Fe(II) from smectite, but only hydrofluoric
acid is effective at extracting Fe(III) (
23). For this reason,
total structural Fe(II) and Fe(III) in the clay were determined
with hydrofluoric acid extraction followed by the 1,10-phenanthroline
assay (
49) as modified by Komadel and Stucki (
20). Reduction
of structural Fe(III) bound in the SWa-1 was monitored by measuring
the accumulation of Fe(II) over time. Fe(II) was extracted from
the clay sample with 0.5 N HCl for 1 h and then separated from
clay particles with microcentrifugation. The Fe(II) content
was determined with ferrozine as described previously (
32).
To assess the concentration of dissolved iron, the SWa-1 slurry
samples were filtered through a 0.2-µm filter in the anaerobic
chamber. Fe(II) and total Fe were measured in the filtrate by
the ferrozine assay (
33).
Microscopy.
Cells were routinely examined with a Zeiss Axioskop 20 phase-contrast microscope equipped with a UV lamp, an excitation filter (LP 420), and a red-attenuation filter (BG 38). Cell numbers were determined by counting DAPI (4',6'-diamino-2-phenylindole)-stained cells under oil immersion (x1,000 magnification) with an ocular grid and UV light (10). Cells were stained by adding a 0.5- to 1-ml aliquot of the culture to about 0.5 to 1 ml of 1x DAPI solution for 5 min; were filtered through a black Isopore membrane filter (0.2-µm pore diameter; Millipore); and then rinsed with water, air dried, and examined under UV light.
Transmission electron microscopy of thin sections of SWa-1 H2-grown cells was carried out as previously described (15). Briefly, cells were fixed for 1 h with glutaraldehyde (5%, vol/vol) in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.2), washed with cacodylate buffer, and postfixed with osmium tetroxide (1%, vol/vol) for 2 h. Samples were dehydrated through increasing concentrations of an ethanol series and embedded in epoxy resin, which polymerized at 70°C for 8 h. Thin sections (70 nm) were stained with 5% uranyl acetate and 0.4% lead citrate and examined with a JEOL 100S microscope. Cells of G. ehrlichii and strain 140 growing on smectite also were stained with ruthenium red to demonstrate the presence of an exopolysaccharide (EPS) matrix with a modification of the method of Vladut-Talor et al. (57). Briefly, samples of cells were prefixed with 0.2% glutaraldehyde and 0.15% ruthenium red (Sigma-Aldrich Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.2) for 30 min at room temperature, followed by fixation in 1% glutaraldehyde and 0.05% ruthenium red in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.2) for 2 h. Fixed cells were then washed five times with 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.2) containing 0.05% ruthenium red and stained with 2% (vol/vol) OsO4 and 0.05% ruthenium red in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.2) for 2 h. The stained cells were then washed in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer and dehydrated in 70% (vol/vol) ethanol containing 0.05% ruthenium red, followed by 90% (vol/vol) ethanol without ruthenium red and two final washes in 100% ethanol. Dehydrated samples were embedded in Spurr resin. The thin sections (70 nm) of the embedded samples were prepared and examined with a JEOL 100S microscope.
X-ray diffraction.
Approximately 1 to 2 ml of the microbially reduced SWa-1 was dropped onto clean petrographic slides to produce an oriented mount of SWa-1 to diffract 00l reflections (38). The air-dried oriented mount was scanned using Cu radiation at 35 kV and 15 mA filtered with a graphite monochromator from 2° 2
to 32° 2
at approximately 1° 2
per minute. The air-dried mount was then solvated in ethylene glycol vapor for 24 h at room temperature and scanned using the conditions mentioned above. The d001 of smectite group minerals characteristically expands to 17Å after solvation with ethylene glycol. The X-ray diffraction patterns were interpreted by comparison to known mineral diffraction patterns of phyllosilicate minerals provided in the work of Moore and Reynolds (38).
Chemical analysis of initial and bioreduced clay.
Major oxides in clay samples were determined in Activation Laboratories by an inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy method. Prior to major oxide determination, clay samples were Na saturated with 1 M NaCl solution and dialyzed in deionized water overnight. The structural formulae of the control and the bioreduced smectites were calculated following the procedures described in the work of Moore and Reynolds (38).

RESULTS
Structural Fe(III) reduction by thermophilic and hyperthermophilic Fe(III)-reducing organisms.
Out of 10 organisms tested, eight (
G. ehrlichii and strains
121, 136, 139, 140, 296, 297, and 301) grew with SWa-1 as the
sole electron acceptor and reduced 6.3 to 15.1% of the structural
Fe(III). Some of the cultures (strains 136 and 301) reduced
structural Fe(III) but did not dissolve it, and some others
(strain 140 and
G. ehrlichii) dissolved a substantial portion
of iron (Table
2). In general, the extent of Fe(III) reduction
did not correlate with the extent of iron dissolution (Table
2). Although
G. ahangari (strain 234) and
G. ferrireducens (strain
FW-1a) were isolated on poorly crystalline Fe(III) oxide as
the sole electron acceptor and H
2 as the sole electron donor,
they were not capable of coupling the reduction of structural
Fe(III) associated with SWa-1 to the oxidation of H
2 (Table
2).
Growth of strain 140 on SWa-1.
Growth was determined by an increase in cell number parallel to the production of Fe(II), resulting from reduction of structural Fe(III) bound within the lattice of phyllosilicates, over the incubation period at the optimal temperature. A 10% inoculum of a culture that had previously been transferred twice in medium with H2 as the electron donor and SWa-1 as the electron acceptor reduced 1 mmol/liter (ca. 11%) of the 9-mmol/liter structural Fe(III) after 36 h of incubation at the optimal growth temperature of 90°C (Fig. 1). Because Fe(III) is located in the octahedral sheets of this smectite, only a modest part of Fe(III) can be reduced by strain 140, and Fe(III) reduction can support only a small microbial population (Fig. 1). Due to the "masking" effect of clay minerals, cell number, which was determined by direct cell count using epifluorescence microscopy, might have been underestimated. Cell growth was not detected in any of the controls. Controls included inoculated tubes with SWa-1 as the sole electron acceptor, without H2 (H2:CO2, 80:20%, vol/vol, 101 kPa) as the electron donor (Fig. 1); inoculated tubes without the electron acceptor, with H2 (H2:CO2, 80:20%, vol/vol, 101 kPa) as the electron donor (data not shown); and uninoculated tubes with SWa-1 and H2 (H2:CO2, 80:20%, vol/vol, 101 kPa), incubated at 90°C. There was no significant reduction of Fe(III) in control tubes without H2 (Fig. 1) or in uninoculated controls (data not shown). Furthermore, Fe(III) reduction was associated with a gradual change in color of the SWa-1 (Fig. 2), which was absent in the controls, suggesting that Fe(III) reduction was not abiotic but a direct consequence of metabolic activity of strain 140 during growth on SWa-1. Similar results were also observed for strains 121, 136, 139, 140, 296, 297, and 301 and G. ehrlichii (data not shown).
Major oxide analysis indicated that Fe(III) reduction was accompanied
by a decrease in iron content and by incorporation of some magnesium,
sodium, and potassium (Table
3). The reduction of structural
Fe(III) in SWa-1 led to an increase in layer charge within the
octahedral sheet, resulting in an increase in interlayer cations
(Table
4). Electron microscopic examination of ruthenium red-stained
cells of strain 140 and
G. ehrlichii growing with SWa-1 smectite
as the electron acceptor revealed a thick layer of electron-dense
material around the cells, consistent with an EPS matrix (Fig.
3A and B, respectively). The thick electron-dense material was
not observed in association with cells of other strains under
investigation.
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TABLE 3. Results of chemical analysis of control SWa-1 (incubated without microorganisms) and SWa-1 bioreduced by strain 140a
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TABLE 4. Calculated formulae for control SWa-1 (incubated without microorganisms) and SWa-1 microbially reduced by strain 140
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X-ray diffraction analysis of bioreduced SWa-1.
It has previously been reported that Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms
play a role in the transformation of smectite to illite (
19).
As shown in Fig.
4, smectite is the predominant phase in these
bioreduced clays based on the presence of a strong diffraction
peak at 5° 2

after solvation with ethylene glycol vapor.
This peak corresponds to a d-spacing of 17Å and is interpreted
to be the d
001 spacing for smectite. The strong diffraction
peaks observed at 26.6° 2

are lower-order 00
l reflections
for smectite group minerals. There were no peaks observed at
8.8° 2

which correspond to the strong diffraction peak (d
001)
for illite. The low peak/saddle ratio (ratio of the peak at
5° 2

and saddle at 4° 2

) is also indicative of the presence
of smectite and the absence of a mixed layered illite-smectite
phase. The peaks observed in the area of 13° 2

are the diffraction
of crystalline components of the growth medium, which dried
with the microbially reduced clays in producing the oriented
mounts. The presence of illite as either a mixed layer of illite-smectite
or illite itself was not recognized from the diffraction patterns
by comparison to published patterns of illite-smectite and illite
(reference
38 and references therein).

DISCUSSION
The results demonstrate that some thermophilic and hyperthermophilic
Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms are capable of reducing the
structural Fe(III) in smectite, suggesting that microbial reduction
of structural Fe(III) in phyllosilicate minerals is possible
in hot environments.
Extent of Fe(III) reduction and iron dissolution.
Our study showed that 6.3 to 15.1% of initial Fe(III) was reduced in a model SWa-1 smectite by thermophilic and hyperthermophilic organisms (Table 2). This is 20 to 50% less than that reported for Fe(III) reduction of the same SWa-1 by mesophilic Fe(III) reducers. The extent of Fe(III) reduction in SWa-1 was 20 to 62% by mesophilic enrichment cultures (6, 24), 20% by Geobacter spp. (24), 20 to 46% by Shewanella spp. (21, 24), and ca. 50% by Desulfitobacterium hafniense (formerly Desulfitobacterium frappieri) (47). The experiments with both mesophilic and thermophilic organisms were performed under anaerobic conditions at circumneutral pH. The main difference is higher temperature, but the extent of Fe(III) reduction in our study does not seem to correlate with the temperature (Table 2). Therefore, physical-chemical factors cannot explain the lesser extent of structural Fe(III) reduction by thermophiles. Most probably the overall decrease in the extent of Fe(III) reduction is related to differences in the electron transfer pathways.
Eight out of 10 of the thermophilic and hyperthermophilic Fe(III)-reducing organisms tested solubilized structural iron in SWa-1. The concentration of iron in solution underestimates the amount of iron liberated from the SWa-1 structure, since a substantial portion of liberated iron can be sorbed by cells and clay minerals (2, 9, 11, 55). In addition, the extent of measured iron dissolution did not correlate with the extent of microbial Fe(III) reduction (Table 2). A small amount (0.04 to 0.14 mmol/liter) of soluble Fe(III) was detected in all cultures for which iron dissolution was documented (Table 2). A similar phenomenon was observed by O'Reilly and coworkers (39), who documented partial alteration of NAu-1 smectite by both aerobic and Fe(III)-respiring cultures of Shewanella oneidensis, resulting in formation of poorly crystalline smectite, amorphous aluminosilicates, and small quantities of soluble Fe(III). The highest amounts of iron were solubilized by a bacterium in the family Geobacteraceae, G. ehrlichii, and by archaeal strain 140. Interestingly, both strains also produced copious EPS material during growth on SWa-1, as demonstrated by its ability to bind to ruthenium red (Fig. 3). Ruthenium red is a polycationic dye that specifically binds to anionic EPSs. Previous studies (3, 35, 52) have shown that acidic EPSs may bind cations such as Fe3+ and other trace metals. This and the fact that as much as 99% of dissolved Fe in the ocean is thought to be bound to organic ligands (43) strongly suggest that anionic microbial EPS materials play a key role in Fe dissolution. Furthermore, in the above-mentioned cultures of G. ehrlichii and strain 140 grown with SWa-1 and H2 the dissolved iron was mainly in the form of Fe(II), which is consistent with earlier studies (22) showing that organic ligands are capable of removing structural Fe(II) from SWa-1.
Smectite-to-illite transformation.
The kinetics of the smectite-to-illite conversion via an intermediate illite-smectite (I-S) mixed-layer phase in sediment diagenesis has been extensively studied (36). The type of stacking order, the percentage of illite layers in I-S, and the K-Ar ages of I-S are very useful in predicting the generation of crude oil and natural gas from source rocks such as shales and in gaining insights into how these hydrocarbons may have been generated in relation to the timing of the formation of hydrocarbon traps (40). As the burial temperature increases to 100 to 150°C in deep subsurface sediment, smectite is converted to illite via a solid-state transformation producing a mixed-layer phase, I-S, or by a dissolution-precipitation process. In the former solid-state mechanism, layer charge is created in smectite by substitution of Al3+ for Si4+ primarily as well as by the substitution of Mg2+ for Al3+ in the octahedral layer. After creation of layer charge, cations (primarily K+) are attracted into the interlayer. Approximately 1 atom of K is added per formula unit during illite formation. In a dissolution-precipitation mechanism, illite is formed from the dissolution of smectite without forming an intermediate I-S mixed-layer phase. The mesophilic Fe(III)-reducing bacterium Shewanella oneidensis catalyzed the smectite-to-illite transformation via a dissolution-precipitation mechanism in a laboratory study (19).
While our results did not show the formation of illite or I-S, our chemical analyses of control and bioreduced SWa-1 indicated that structural Fe(III) reduction by hyperthermophilic strain 140 was associated with an increase in layer charge in the octahedral sheet followed by the incorporation of magnesium, sodium, and potassium (mostly magnesium) into the structure. The amount of layer charge and the interlayer cations formed in the time period of this study (3 days) were not quantitatively sufficient to form an illite-like structure (Table 4). However, this does not preclude formation of illite from smectite via a solid-state transformation as the result of microbially mediated redox cycling. In an earlier study of the effect of chemical iron redox cycling in SWa-1 on potassium fixation, the amount of fixed K was documented to increase with each redox cycle, resulting in conversion of smectite to a more illitic form (48). Therefore, our study supports the idea of possible microbial involvement in the conversion of smectite to illite in the subsurface (5).
Implications for Fe(III) cycling in hot environments.
The results indicate that Fe(III)-bearing phyllosilicates such as smectite could potentially contribute to the microbial cycling of iron in hydrothermal environments (8, 42, 44). It remains to be seen whether thermophilic or hyperthermophilic microorganisms can reduce the Fe(III) in other Fe(III)-bearing phyllosilicates formed by hydrothermal metamorphism of mafic rocks (serpentine, talc, and chlorite). The inability of G. ferrireducens and G. ahangari to reduce the structural Fe(III) in smectite, despite their ability to reduce Fe(III) hydroxide, suggests that the mechanisms for electron transfer to these sources of solid-phase Fe(III) are different. Further studies are required to clarify the pathways leading to Fe(III) reduction in phyllosilicates versus Fe(III) hydroxides.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Anna-Louise Reysenbach (supported by National Science
Foundation grant OCE-0242038) and John A. Baross for the vent
samples.
This work was supported by a start-up package provided to K.K. by the Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics and the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station at Michigan State University and by a grant (MCB-0348085) to D.R.L. and K.K. from the "Microbial Observatories Program" of the National Science Foundation.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, 6191 Biomedical and Physical Sciences Bldg., Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824. Phone: (517) 355-6463, ext. 1608. Fax: (517) 353-8957. E-mail:
kashefi{at}msu.edu 
Published ahead of print on 2 November 2007. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2008, p. 251-258, Vol. 74, No. 1
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