Unlabelled: Freshwater ecosystems can be largely affected by neighboring agriculture fields where potential fertilizer nitrate run-off may leach into surrounding water bodies. To counteract this eutrophic driver, farmers in certain areas are utilizing denitrifying woodchip bioreactors (WBRs) in which a consortium of microorganisms convert the nitrate into nitrogen gases in anoxia, fueled by the degradation of lignocellulose. Polysaccharide-degrading strategies have been well described for various aerobic and anaerobic systems, including the use of carbohydrate-active enzymes, utilization of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases (LPMOs) and other redox enzymes, as well as the use of cellulosomes and polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms, including bacteria, archaea, viruses, fungi, and protists, are essential to life on Earth and the functioning of the biosphere. Here, we discuss the key roles of microorganisms in achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), highlighting recent and emerging advances in microbial research and technology that can facilitate our transition toward a sustainable future. Given the central role of microorganisms in the biochemical processing of elements, synthesizing new materials, supporting human health, and facilitating life in managed and natural landscapes, microbial research and technologies are directly or indirectly relevant for achieving each of the SDGs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDenitrification - a key process in the global nitrogen cycle and main source of the greenhouse gas NO - is intricately controlled by O. While the transition from aerobic respiration to denitrification is well-studied, our understanding of denitrifier communities' responses to cyclic oxic/anoxic shifts, prevalent in natural and engineered systems, is limited. Here, agricultural soil is exposed to repeated cycles of long or short anoxic spells (LA; SA) or constant oxic conditions (Ox).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeterotrophic nitrifiers continue to be a hiatus in our understanding of the nitrogen cycle. Despite their discovery over 50 years ago, the physiology and environmental role of this enigmatic group remain elusive. The current theory is that heterotrophic nitrifiers are capable of converting ammonia to hydroxylamine, nitrite, nitric oxide, nitrous oxide, and dinitrogen gas via the subsequent actions of nitrification and denitrification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFarmed soils contribute substantially to global warming by emitting NO (ref. ), and mitigation has proved difficult. Several microbial nitrogen transformations produce NO, but the only biological sink for NO is the enzyme NosZ, catalysing the reduction of NO to N (ref.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Nurse educators' competencies play a crucial role in the educational quality of nurses.
Objective: This study aimed to investigate how Norwegian nurse educators self-rated their competence domains, and how these competencies were associated background variables.
Methods: The study was designed as a cross-sectional web-survey, and n=154 participated and filled out the Evaluation of Requirements of Nurse Teachers (ERNT) instrument.
Dissimilatory nitrate/nitrite reduction to ammonium (DNRA) is a microbial energy-conserving process that reduces NO and/or NO to NH . Interestingly, DNRA-catalyzing microorganisms possessing genes are occasionally found harboring genes encoding nitrous oxide reductases, i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNitrous oxide (NO) emitted from agricultural soils destroys stratospheric ozone and contributes to global warming. A promising approach to reduce emissions is fertilizing the soil using organic wastes augmented by non-denitrifying NO-reducing bacteria (NNRB). To realize this potential, we need a suite of NNRB strains that fulfill several criteria: efficient reduction of NO, ability to grow in organic waste, and ability to survive in farmland soil.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRhizobia living as microsymbionts inside nodules have stable access to carbon substrates, but also must survive as free-living bacteria in soil where they are starved for carbon and energy most of the time. Many rhizobia can denitrify, thus switch to anaerobic respiration under low O tension using -oxides as electron acceptors. The cellular machinery regulating this transition is relatively well known from studies under optimal laboratory conditions, while little is known about this regulation in starved organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdaptation to anoxia by synthesizing a denitrification proteome costs metabolic energy, and the anaerobic respiration conserves less energy per electron than aerobic respiration. This implies a selective advantage of the stringent O repression of denitrification gene transcription, which is found in most denitrifying bacteria. In some bacteria, the metabolic burden of adaptation can be minimized further by phenotypic diversification, colloquially termed "bet-hedging," where all cells synthesize the NO reductase (NosZ) but only a minority synthesize nitrite reductase (NirS), as demonstrated for the model strain Paracoccus denitrificans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFManipulating soil metabolism through heavy inoculation with microbes is feasible if organic wastes can be utilized as the substrate for growth and vector as a fertilizer. This, however, requires organisms active in both digestate and soil (generalists). Here, we present a dual enrichment strategy to enrich and isolate such generalists among NO-respiring bacteria (NRB) in soil and digestates, to be used as an inoculum for strengthening the NO-reduction capacity of soils.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (NO) has strong potential to drive climate change. Soils are a major source of NO, with microbial nitrification and denitrification being the primary processes involved in such emissions. The soybean endosymbiont is a model microorganism to study denitrification, a process that depends on a set of reductases, encoded by the , , , and genes, which sequentially reduce nitrate (NO) to nitrite (NO), nitric oxide (NO), NO, and dinitrogen (N).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStimulating litho-autotrophic denitrification in aquifers with hydrogen is a promising strategy to remove excess NO , but it often entails accumulation of the cytotoxic intermediate NO and the greenhouse gas N O. To explore if these high NO and N O concentrations are caused by differences in the genomic composition, the regulation of gene transcription or the kinetics of the reductases involved, we isolated hydrogenotrophic denitrifiers from a polluted aquifer, performed whole-genome sequencing and investigated their phenotypes. We therefore assessed the kinetics of NO , NO, N O, N and O as they depleted O and transitioned to denitrification with NO as the only electron acceptor and hydrogen as the electron donor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInoculating agricultural soils with nitrous oxide respiring bacteria (NRB) can reduce NO-emission, but would be impractical as a standalone operation. Here we demonstrate that digestates obtained after biogas production are suitable substrates and vectors for NRB. We show that indigenous NRB in digestates grew to high abundance during anaerobic enrichment under NO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Globally, approximately 15% of all babies are born with low birth weight (< 2.5 kg) and ≥ 90% of them are born in low- and middle-income countries. Malaria infection in pregnancy remains a public health concern as it can affect both the mother and the newborn.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoil pH is a key controller of denitrification. We analysed the metagenomics/transcriptomics and phenomics of two soils from a long-term liming experiment, SoilN (pH 6.8) and un-limed SoilA (pH 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBradyrhizobia are common members of soil microbiomes and known as N -fixing symbionts of economically important legumes. Many are also denitrifiers, which can act as sinks or sources for N O. Inoculation with compatible rhizobia is often needed for optimal N -fixation, but the choice of inoculant may have consequences for N O emission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFungal denitrification is claimed to produce non-negligible amounts of N O in soils, but few tested species have shown significant activity. We hypothesized that denitrifying fungi would be found among those with assimilatory nitrate reductase, and tested 20 such batch cultures for their respiratory metabolism, including two positive controls, Fusarium oxysporum and Fusarium lichenicola, throughout the transition from oxic to anoxic conditions in media supplemented with . Enzymatic reduction of (NIR) and NO (NOR) was assessed by correcting measured NO- and N O-kinetics for abiotic NO- and N O-production (sterile controls).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Microbiol
September 2019
In the Anthropocene, in which we now live, climate change is impacting most life on Earth. Microorganisms support the existence of all higher trophic life forms. To understand how humans and other life forms on Earth (including those we are yet to discover) can withstand anthropogenic climate change, it is vital to incorporate knowledge of the microbial 'unseen majority'.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvaluators often neglect to question whether a program has been appropriately designed for a new context prior to a feasibility study's commencement. In this paper, we document the results of a case study that closely examined context when determining the feasibility of implementing a FoodShare outreach program in rural northern Wisconsin. Using community-based participatory mixed methods, we examine how stakeholder engagement led to both study refinement and a more comprehensive understanding of community food security based on contextual factors and systems thinking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring the past twenty years, the Nordic countries (Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Norway) have introduced a range of measures to reduce losses of nitrogen (N) to air and to aquatic environment by leaching and runoff. However, the agricultural sector is still an important N source to the environment, and projections indicate relatively small emission reductions in the coming years. The four Nordic countries have different priorities and strategies regarding agricultural N flows and mitigation measures, and therefore they are facing different challenges and barriers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDenitrification allows sustained respiratory metabolism during periods of anoxia, an advantage in soils with frequent anoxic spells. However, the gains may be more than evened out by the energy cost of producing the denitrification machinery, particularly if the anoxic spell is short. This dilemma could explain the evolution of different regulatory phenotypes observed in model strains, such as sequential expression of the four denitrification genes needed for a complete reduction of nitrate to N, or a "bet hedging" strategy where all four genes are expressed only in a fraction of the cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe strong greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (NO) can be emitted from wastewater treatment systems as a byproduct of ammonium oxidation and as the last intermediate in the stepwise reduction of nitrate to N by denitrifying organisms. A potential strategy to reduce NO emissions would be to enhance the activity of NO reductase (NOS) in the denitrifying microbial community. A survey of existing literature on denitrification in wastewater treatment systems showed that the NO reducing capacity (V) exceeded the capacity to produce NO (V) by a factor of 2-10.
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