Transcript Chapter 27

Chapter 27
Environmental Microbiology
Metabolic Diversity
• Microbes live in the most widely varied habitats
on Earth
– due to metabolic diversity
– dynamic associations occur between microbes and
ecosystem
• Extremophiles
– Most are Archaea
– Produce specialized enzymes (extremozymes) that
allow them to tolerate extreme conditions
• Microbes live in an intensely competitive
environment
– High biodiversity
– Competitive exclusion
– Live in symbiotic relationships
• Ruminants
• Mycorhizae
Endomycorrhiza
Ectomycorrhiza
• Soil Microbiology
• Billions of organisms in soil
– Over 80 % are bacteria
• Millions in each gram of soil
– Most are in the top few centimeters of soil
– Biomining
– Many antibiotics come from Actinomycetes
• Streptomycin, tetracycline
– Bacterial populations estimated by plate count
– Biogeochemical cycles for carbon,
nitrogen, sulfur and phosphorus are vital
for life
• Elements oxidized and reduced by microbes to
meet their metabolic need
• Recycles elements into the environment
– Production
– Consumption
– Decomposition
The Carbon Cycle
• All organisms contain large amounts of carbon
• Autotrophs fix CO2 into organics
– 1st step of carbon cycle
• Heterotrophs consume autotrophs
– 2nd step of carbon cycle
• Carbon reenters the environment as CO2
– due to respiration; decomposition by microbes;
burning fossil fuels
• Global warming
The Nitrogen Cycle
• Nitrogen is needed for synthesis of proteins
and nucleic acids
• Deamination
– amino groups are removed and converted to
ammonia
• Ammonification
– release of ammonia
• Nitrification
– oxidation of ammonium into nitrate
– nitrate can be fully oxidized and used as an electron
acceptor
• Denitrification
– leads to loss of nitrogen back to the atmosphere as
nitrogen gas
– Pseudomonas species are the most important soil
denitrifying bacteria
– Occurs in waterlogged soils where little oxygen is
available
Nitrogen Cycle
Proteins and waste products
Microbial ammonification
Amino acids (–NH2)
Ammonium ion (NH4
Nitrite ion (NO2
-)
Nitrate ion (NO3
-)
Microbial decomposition
+)
Nitrosomonas
Nitrobacter
Pseudmonas
Ammonia (NH3)
Nitrite ion (NO2- )
Nitrate ion (NO3- )
N2
Amino acids
• Nitrogen makes up ~ 80% of the Earth’s
atmosphere
– Exists as nitrogen gas (N2)
• Must be fixed into usable form
– Specific microbes important in this conversion
– Nitrogen fixation requires nitrogenase
– Deactivated by oxygen
Nitrogen - fixation
N2
Ammonia (NH3)
• Two types of nitrogen fixers:
– Free-living
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found in rhizosophere
Aerobic species - Azotobacter and Beijerinckia
Cyanobacteria –heterocysts
Anaerobic species - Clostridium
– Symbiotic
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Rhizobia form root nodules on legume plants
Frankia associated with alder trees
Lichens when containing a cyanobacteria
Cyanobacteria & Azolla in rice patty water
The Sulfur Cycle
• Involves numerous oxidation states
• Most reduced forms are sulfides like H2S gas
– Generally forms under anaerobic conditions
• Source of energy for some autotrophic bacteria
– Convert reduced sulfur in H2S into elemental sulfur
and oxidized sulfates
– Thiobacillus
– Endoliths
• Winogradsky studied filamentous aquatic
bacteria Beggiatoa alba
– Revealed much about bacterial sulfur
recycling and chemoautotrophy
• Primary producers in deep ocean and
endolithic communities are chemoautotrophic
bacteria
• Several photo-autotrophic bacteria use light
for energy and use H2S to reduce CO2
• Sulfates are incorporated into plants, animals
and bacteria as disulfide bonds in proteins
• Proteins decompose; sulfur released as H2S
– Dissimilation
Sulfur Cycle
Proteins and waste products
Amino acids (–SH)
Thiobacillus
H2S
SO4
2–
SO42–
Microbial decomposition
Microbial dissimilation
H2S
SO42– (for energy)
Microbial & plant assimilation
Desulfovibrio
Amino acids
H2S (reduced)
Amino acids
The Phosphorus Cycle
• Limiting factor for plant and animal growth
• Exists primarily as phosphate ion (PO43-)
• Little change during oxidation
– soluble to insoluble; organic to inorganic
– Often related to pH
– Can be solubilized in rock by acids produced by
bacteria like Thiobacillus
• There is no product to return it to atmosphere
• Accumulates in sea; certain islands are mined
for phosphate deposits
• Used in detergents and fertilizers
– Runoff may lead to eutrophication
The Phosphorous Cycle