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Novel Insight into Microbially Mediated Nitrate-Reducing Fe(II) Oxidation by Acidovorax sp. Strain BoFeN1 Using Dual N-O Isotope Fractionation.

Dandan ChenKuan ChengTongxu LiuGuojun ChenAndreas KapplerXiaomin LiRaymond Jianxiong ZengYang YangFujun YueShiwen HuFang CaoFang-Bai Li
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2023)
Microbially mediated nitrate reduction coupled with Fe(II) oxidation (NRFO) plays an important role in the Fe/N interactions in pH-neutral anoxic environments. However, the relative contributions of the chemical and microbial processes to NRFO are still unclear. In this study, N-O isotope fractionation during NRFO was investigated. The ratios of O and N isotope enrichment factors ( 18 ε: 15 ε)-NO 3 - indicated that the main nitrate reductase functioning in Acidovorax sp. strain BoFeN1 was membrane-bound dissimilatory nitrate reductase (Nar). N-O isotope fractionation during chemodenitrification [Fe(II) + NO 2 - ], microbial nitrite reduction (cells + NO 2 - ), and the coupled process [cells + NO 2 - + Fe(II)] was explored. The ratios of ( 18 ε: 15 ε)-NO 2 - were 0.58 ± 0.05 during chemodenitrification and -0.41 ± 0.11 during microbial nitrite reduction, indicating that N-O isotopes can be used to distinguish chemical from biological reactions. The ( 18 ε: 15 ε)-NO 2 - of 0.70 ± 0.05 during the coupled process was close to that obtained for chemodenitrification, indicating that chemodenitrification played a more important role than biological reactions during the coupled process. The results of kinetic modeling showed that the relative contribution of chemodenitrification was 99.3% during the coupled process, which was consistent with that of isotope fractionation. This study provides a better understanding of chemical and biological mechanisms of NRFO using N-O isotopes and kinetic modeling.
Keyphrases
  • nitric oxide
  • induced apoptosis
  • microbial community
  • drinking water
  • gas chromatography
  • metal organic framework
  • cell cycle arrest
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • aqueous solution
  • mass spectrometry
  • cell death
  • single molecule