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Microbial acetone oxidation in coastal seawater. | LitMetric

Microbial acetone oxidation in coastal seawater.

Front Microbiol

Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place Plymouth, UK.

Published: June 2014

Acetone is an important oxygenated volatile organic compound (OVOC) in the troposphere where it influences the oxidizing capacity of the atmosphere. However, the air-sea flux is not well quantified, in part due to a lack of knowledge regarding which processes control oceanic concentrations, and, specifically whether microbial oxidation to CO2 represents a significant loss process. We demonstrate that (14)C labeled acetone can be used to determine microbial oxidation to (14)CO2. Linear microbial rates of acetone oxidation to CO2 were observed for between 0.75-3.5 h at a seasonally eutrophic coastal station located in the western English Channel (L4). A kinetic experiment in summer at station L4 gave a V max of 4.1 pmol L(-1) h(-1), with a K m constant of 54 pM. We then used this technique to obtain microbial acetone loss rates ranging between 1.2 and 42 pmol L(-1) h(-1.)(monthly averages) over an annual cycle at L4, with maximum rates observed during winter months. The biological turnover time of acetone (in situ concentration divided by microbial oxidation rate) in surface waters varied from ~3 days in February 2011, when in situ concentrations were 3 ± 1 nM, to >240 days in June 2011, when concentrations were more than twofold higher at 7.5 ± 0.7 nM. These relatively low marine microbial acetone oxidation rates, when normalized to in situ concentrations, suggest that marine microbes preferentially utilize other OVOCs such as methanol and acetaldehyde.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4033308PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2014.00243DOI Listing

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