Burkholderiaceae Are Key Acetate Assimilators During Complete Denitrification in Acidic Cryoturbated Peat Circles of the Arctic Tundra

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dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/12298
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/12396
dc.contributor.author Hetz, Stefanie A.
dc.contributor.author Horn, Marcus A.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-06-21T05:47:16Z
dc.date.available 2022-06-21T05:47:16Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.citation Hetz, S.A.; Horn, M.A.: Burkholderiaceae Are Key Acetate Assimilators During Complete Denitrification in Acidic Cryoturbated Peat Circles of the Arctic Tundra. In: Frontiers in Microbiology 12 (2021), 628269. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.628269
dc.description.abstract Cryoturbated peat circles (pH 4) in the Eastern European Tundra harbor up to 2 mM pore water nitrate and emit the greenhouse gas N2O like heavily fertilized agricultural soils in temperate regions. The main process yielding N2O under oxygen limited conditions is denitrification, which is the sequential reduction of nitrate/nitrite to N2O and/or N2. N2O reduction to N2 is impaired by pH < 6 in classical model denitrifiers and many environments. Key microbes of peat circles are important but largely unknown catalysts for C- and N-cycling associated N2O fluxes. Thus, we hypothesized that the peat circle community includes hitherto unknown taxa and is essentially unable to efficiently perform complete denitrification, i.e., reduce N2O, due to a low in situ pH. 16S rRNA analysis indicated a diverse active community primarily composed of the bacterial class-level taxa Alphaproteobacteria, Acidimicrobiia, Acidobacteria, Verrucomicrobiae, and Bacteroidia, as well as archaeal Nitrososphaeria. Euryarchaeota were not detected. 13C2- and 12C2-acetate supplemented anoxic microcosms with endogenous nitrate and acetylene at an in situ near pH of 4 were used to assess acetate dependent carbon flow, denitrification and N2O production. Initial nitrate and acetate were consumed within 6 and 11 days, respectively, and primarily converted to CO2 and N2, suggesting complete acetate fueled denitrification at acidic pH. Stable isotope probing coupled to 16S rRNA analysis via Illumina MiSeq amplicon sequencing identified acetate consuming key players of the family Burkholderiaceae during complete denitrification correlating with Rhodanobacter spp. The archaeal community consisted primarily of ammonia-oxidizing Archaea of Nitrososphaeraceae, and was stable during the incubation. The collective data indicate that peat circles (i) host acid-tolerant denitrifiers capable of complete denitrification at pH 4–5.5, (ii) other parameters like carbon availability rather than pH are possible reasons for high N2O emissions in situ, and (iii) Burkholderiaceae are responsive key acetate assimilators co-occurring with Rhodanobacter sp. during denitrification, suggesting both organisms being associated with acid-tolerant denitrification in peat circles. © Copyright © 2021 Hetz and Horn. eng
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher Lausanne : Frontiers Media
dc.relation.ispartofseries Frontiers in Microbiology 12 (2021)
dc.rights CC BY 4.0 Unported
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject 16S rRNA stable isotope probing eng
dc.subject climatechange eng
dc.subject isotope tracing eng
dc.subject nitrous oxide eng
dc.subject permafrost affected soils eng
dc.subject acetylene eng
dc.subject ammonia eng
dc.subject carbon eng
dc.subject carbon dioxide eng
dc.subject diclofenac eng
dc.subject glyphosate eng
dc.subject ground water eng
dc.subject hemicellulose eng
dc.subject inulin eng
dc.subject lignocellulose eng
dc.subject nitrate eng
dc.subject nitric oxide reductase eng
dc.subject nitrite eng
dc.subject nitrogen eng
dc.subject nitrous oxide eng
dc.subject nitrous oxide reductase eng
dc.subject peat eng
dc.subject rituximab eng
dc.subject RNA 16S eng
dc.subject stable isotope eng
dc.subject acidification eng
dc.subject Acidobacteria eng
dc.subject Actinobacteria eng
dc.subject Alphaproteobacteria eng
dc.subject ammonia oxidizing archaeon eng
dc.subject arctic tundra eng
dc.subject bacterial growth eng
dc.subject Bacteroidia eng
dc.subject Betaproteobacteria eng
dc.subject biodegradation eng
dc.subject bioremediation eng
dc.subject Burkholderiaceae eng
dc.subject cyanobacterium eng
dc.subject denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis eng
dc.subject density gradient centrifugation eng
dc.subject electron transport eng
dc.subject Escherichia coli eng
dc.subject Firmicutes eng
dc.subject flow rate eng
dc.subject gene amplification eng
dc.subject gene sequence eng
dc.subject high performance liquid chromatography eng
dc.subject human eng
dc.subject isotope tracing eng
dc.subject marine environment eng
dc.subject methanogenesis eng
dc.subject microcosm eng
dc.subject nonhuman eng
dc.subject organismal interaction eng
dc.subject permafrost eng
dc.subject photosynthesis eng
dc.subject Proteobacteria eng
dc.subject spectrofluorometry eng
dc.subject thermal conductivity eng
dc.subject.ddc 570 | Biowissenschaften, Biologie ger
dc.title Burkholderiaceae Are Key Acetate Assimilators During Complete Denitrification in Acidic Cryoturbated Peat Circles of the Arctic Tundra
dc.type Article
dc.type Text
dc.relation.essn 1664-302X
dc.relation.doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.628269
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume 12
dc.bibliographicCitation.firstPage 628269
dc.description.version publishedVersion
tib.accessRights frei zug�nglich


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