Nitrogen fixation and nitrogenase activities in members of the family Rhodospirillaceae

Author:

Madigan M,Cox S S,Stegeman R A

Abstract

Strains of all 18 species of the family Rhodospirillaceae (nonsulfur photosynthetic bacteria) were studied for their comparative nitrogen-fixing abilities. All species, with the exception of Rhodocyclus purpureus, were capable of growth with N2 as the sole nitrogen source under photosynthetic (anaerobic) conditions. Most rapid growth on N2 was observed in strains of Rhodopseudomonas capsulata. Within the genus Rhodopseudomonas, the species R. capsulata, R. sphaeroides, R. viridis, R. gelatinosa, and R. blastica consistently showed the highest in vivo nitrogenase rates (with the acetylene reduction technique); nitrogenase rates in other species of Rhodopseudomonas and in most species of Rhodospirillum were notably lower. Chemotrophic (dark microaerobic) nitrogen fixation occurred in all species with the exception of one strain of Rhodospirillum fulvum; oxygen requirements for dark N2 fixation varied considerably among species and even within strains of the same species. We conclude that the capacity to fix molecular nitrogen is virtually universal among members of the Rhodospirillaceae but that the efficacy of the process varies considerably among species.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

Reference32 articles.

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2. Photosynthesis and respiration in Rhodospirillum rubrum;Clayton R. K.;Arch. Mikrobiol.,1955

3. Rhodospirillum salexigens, spec. nov., an obligatory halophilic phototrophic bacterium;Drews G.;Arch. Microbiol.,1981

4. Rhodopseudomonas blastica, sp. nov., a member of the Rhodospirillaceae;Eckersley K.;J. Gen Microbiol.,1980

5. Nitrogen fixation (acetylene reduction) by epiphytes of freshwater macrophytes;Finke L. R.;Appl. Environ. Microbiol.,1978

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