Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
2. Energy Biosciences Institute, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A novel dissimilatory perchlorate-reducing bacterium (DPRB),
Arcobacter
sp. strain CAB, was isolated from a marina in Berkeley, CA. Phylogenetically, this halophile was most closely related to
Arcobacter defluvii
strain SW30-2 and
Arcobacter ellisii
. With acetate as the electron donor, strain CAB completely reduced perchlorate (ClO
4
−
) or chlorate (ClO
3
−
) [collectively designated (per)chlorate] to innocuous chloride (Cl
−
), likely using the perchlorate reductase (Pcr) and chlorite dismutase (Cld) enzymes. When grown with perchlorate, optimum growth was observed at 25 to 30°C, pH 7, and 3% NaCl. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) preparations were dominated by free-swimming straight rods with 1 to 2 polar flagella per cell. Strain CAB utilized a variety of organic acids, fructose, and hydrogen as electron donors coupled to (per)chlorate reduction. Further, under anoxic growth conditions strain CAB utilized the biogenic oxygen produced as a result of chlorite dismutation to oxidize catechol via the
meta
-cleavage pathway of aerobic catechol degradation and the catechol 2,3-dioxygenase enzyme. In addition to (per)chlorate, oxygen and nitrate were alternatively used as electron acceptors. The 3.48-Mb draft genome encoded a distinct perchlorate reduction island (PRI) containing several transposases. The genome lacks the
pcrC
gene, which was previously thought to be essential for (per)chlorate reduction, and appears to use an unrelated
Arcobacter c
-type cytochrome to perform the same function.
IMPORTANCE
The study of dissimilatory perchlorate-reducing bacteria (DPRB) has largely focused on freshwater, mesophilic, neutral-pH environments. This study identifies a novel marine DPRB in the genus
Arcobacter
that represents the first description of a DPRB associated with the
Campylobacteraceae
. Strain CAB is currently the only epsilonproteobacterial DPRB in pure culture. The genome of strain CAB lacks the
pcrC
gene found in all other DPRB tested, demonstrating a new variation on the (per)chlorate reduction pathway. The ability of strain CAB to oxidize catechol via the oxygenase-dependent
meta
-cleavage pathway in the absence of external oxygen by using the biogenic oxygen produced from the dismutation of chlorite provides a valuable model for understanding the anaerobic degradation of a broad diversity of xenobiotics which are recalcitrant to anaerobic metabolism but labile to oxygenase-dependent mechanisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
35 articles.
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