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Citation
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HERO ID
1510988
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Ecophysiology of an ammonia-oxidizing archaeon adapted to low-salinity habitats
Author(s)
Mosier, AC; Lund, MB; Francis, CA
Year
2012
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Microbial Ecology
ISSN:
0095-3628
EISSN:
1432-184X
Volume
64
Issue
4
Page Numbers
955-963
Language
English
PMID
22644483
DOI
10.1007/s00248-012-0075-1
Web of Science Id
WOS:000310127900010
Abstract
Ammonia oxidation in marine and terrestrial ecosystems plays a pivotal role in the cycling of nitrogen and carbon. Recent discoveries have shown that ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) are both abundant and diverse in these systems, yet very little is known about their physiology. Here we report a physiological analysis of a novel low-salinity-type AOA enriched from the San Francisco Bay estuary, Candidatus Nitrosoarchaeum limnia strain SFB1. N. limnia has a slower growth rate than Nitrosopumilus maritimus and Nitrososphaera viennensis EN76, the only pure AOA isolates described to date, but the growth rate is comparable to the growth of marine AOA enrichment cultures. The growth rate only slightly decreased when N. limnia was grown under lower-oxygen conditions (5.5 % oxygen in the headspace). Although N. limnia was capable of growth at 75 % of seawater salinity, there was a longer lag time, incomplete oxidation of ammonia to nitrite, and slower overall growth rate. Allylthiourea (ATU) only partially inhibited growth and ammonia oxidation by N. limnia at concentrations known to completely inhibit bacterial ammonia oxidation. Using electron microscopy, we confirmed the presence of flagella as suggested by various flagellar biosynthesis genes in the N. limnia genome. We demonstrate that N. limnia is representative of a low-salinity estuarine AOA ecotype and that more than 85 % of its proteins have highest identity to other coastal and estuarine metagenomic sequences. Our findings further highlight the physiology of N. limnia and help explain its ecological adaptation to low-salinity niches.
Tags
IRIS
•
Ammonia
Literature Search Update – March 2013 (private)
Literature Search Update – Sept 2015 (private)
Literature Search Results
•
Nitrate/Nitrite
Supplemental LitSearch Update 1600-2015
PubMed
WoS
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