Bioavailability of mineral‐associated trace metals as cofactors for nitrogen fixation by Azotobacter vinelandii

Author:

Srivastava Shreya1,Dong Hailiang1ORCID,Baars Oliver2,Sheng Yizhi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geology and Environmental Earth Science Miami University Oxford Ohio USA

2. Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology North Carolina State University North Carolina Raleigh USA

Abstract

AbstractLife on Earth depends on N2‐fixing microbes to make ammonia from atmospheric N2 gas by the nitrogenase enzyme. Most nitrogenases use Mo as a cofactor; however, V and Fe are also possible. N2 fixation was once believed to have evolved during the Archean‐Proterozoic times using Fe as a cofactor. However, δ15N values of paleo‐ocean sediments suggest Mo and V cofactors despite their low concentrations in the paleo‐oceans. This apparent paradox is based on an untested assumption that only soluble metals are bioavailable. In this study, laboratory experiments were performed to test the bioavailability of mineral‐associated trace metals to a model N2‐fixing bacterium Azotobacter vinelandii. N2 fixation was observed when Mo in molybdenite, V in cavansite, and Fe in ferrihydrite were used as the sole sources of cofactors, but the rate of N2 fixation was greatly reduced. A physical separation between minerals and cells further reduced the rate of N2 fixation. Biochemical assays detected five siderophores, including aminochelin, azotochelin, azotobactin, protochelin, and vibrioferrin, as possible chelators to extract metals from minerals. The results of this study demonstrate that mineral‐associated trace metals are bioavailable as cofactors of nitrogenases to support N2 fixation in those environments that lack soluble trace metals and may offer a partial answer to the paradox.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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