Collaborative metabolisms of urea and cyanate degradation in marine anammox bacterial culture

Author:

Oshiki Mamoru12,Morimoto Emi12,Kobayashi Kanae123,Satoh Hisashi12,Okabe Satoshi12

Affiliation:

1. Division of Environmental Engineering , Faculty of Engineering, , North 13, West 8, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-8628 , Japan

2. Hokkaido University , Faculty of Engineering, , North 13, West 8, Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-8628 , Japan

3. Institute for Extra-Cutting-Edge Science and Technology Avant-Garde Research (X-star), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) , 2-15 Natsushima-cho, Yokosuka, Kanagawa 237-0061 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract Anammox process greatly contributes to nitrogen loss occurring in oceanic oxygen minimum zones (OMZs), where the availability of NH4+ is scarce as compared with NO2−. Remineralization of organic nitrogen compounds including urea and cyanate (OCN−) into NH4+ has been believed as an NH4+ source of the anammox process in oxygen minimum zones. However, urea- or OCN−- dependent anammox has not been well examined due to the lack of marine anammox bacterial culture. In the present study, urea and OCN− degradation in a marine anammox bacterial consortium were investigated based on 15N-tracer experiments and metagenomic analysis. Although a marine anammox bacterium, Candidatus Scalindua sp., itself was incapable of urea and OCN− degradation, urea was anoxically decomposed to NH4+ by the coexisting ureolytic bacteria (Rhizobiaceae, Nitrosomonadaceae, and/or Thalassopiraceae bacteria), whereas OCN− was abiotically degraded to NH4+. The produced NH4+ was subsequently utilized in the anammox process. The activity of the urea degradation increased under microaerobic condition (ca. 32–42 μM dissolved O2, DO), and the contribution of the anammox process to the total nitrogen loss also increased up to 33.3% at 32 μM DO. Urea-dependent anammox activities were further examined in a fluid thioglycolate media with a vertical gradient of O2 concentration, and the active collaborative metabolism of the urea degradation and anammox was detected at the lower oxycline (21 μM DO).

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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