Complete nitrification by a single microorganism
Until now, the oxidation steps necessary for complete nitrification had always been observed to occur in two separate microorganisms in a cross-feeding interaction; here, together with the study by Daims et al ., van Kessel et al . report the enrichment and characterization of Nitrospira species tha...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature (London) 2015-12, Vol.528 (7583), p.555-559 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Until now, the oxidation steps necessary for complete nitrification had always been observed to occur in two separate microorganisms in a cross-feeding interaction; here, together with the study by Daims
et al
., van Kessel
et al
. report the enrichment and characterization of
Nitrospira
species that encode all of the enzymes necessary to catalyse complete nitrification, a phenotype referred to as ‘comammox’ (for complete ammonia oxidation).
Time to rethink nitrification
Two groups this week report the enrichment and characterization of
Nitrospira
species that encode all of the enzymes necessary to catalyse complete nitrification, a phenotype referred to as 'comammox' (for complete ammonia oxidation). Until now, this two-step reaction was thought to involve two organisms in a cross-feeding interaction. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that comammox
Nitrospira
are present in a number of diverse environments, so these findings have the potential to fundamentally change our view of the nitrogen cycle and open a new frontier in nitrification research.
Nitrification is a two-step process where ammonia is first oxidized to nitrite by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and/or archaea, and subsequently to nitrate by nitrite-oxidizing bacteria. Already described by Winogradsky in 1890
1
, this division of labour between the two functional groups is a generally accepted characteristic of the biogeochemical nitrogen cycle
2
. Complete oxidation of ammonia to nitrate in one organism (complete ammonia oxidation; comammox) is energetically feasible, and it was postulated that this process could occur under conditions selecting for species with lower growth rates but higher growth yields than canonical ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms
3
. Still, organisms catalysing this process have not yet been discovered. Here we report the enrichment and initial characterization of two
Nitrospira
species that encode all the enzymes necessary for ammonia oxidation via nitrite to nitrate in their genomes, and indeed completely oxidize ammonium to nitrate to conserve energy. Their ammonia monooxygenase (AMO) enzymes are phylogenetically distinct from currently identified AMOs, rendering recent acquisition by horizontal gene transfer from known ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms unlikely. We also found highly similar
amoA
sequences (encoding the AMO subunit A) in public sequence databases, which were apparently misclassified as methane monooxygenases. This recognition of a novel
amoA
sequence group w |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nature16459 |