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03/24/2010 20:43

Bacteria produce oxygen even without light

Dr. Manfred Schloesser Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für marine Mikrobiologie

    The molecular secrets of a bacterium which produces its own oxygen to use the green house gas methane was unravelled.

    The molecular secrets of a bacterium which produces its own oxygen to use the green house gas methane was unravelled. A Dutch research team from the University of Nijmegen discovered bacteria that oxidize the methane without oxygen. Instead, these bacteria used nitrite, commonly available in freshwater sediments in agricultural areas. Methane is a very stable molecule and its degradation was generally believed to be impossible without oxygen (or sulfate). Now an international team from the The Netherlands, France and Germany shows that the bacteria actually do use oxygen for methane oxidation. Only they make this oxygen themselves, like plants - but without light. The oxygen is manufactured from the nitrite. Until now scientists thought that the art of making oxygen was restricted to plants, algae and cyanobacteria. Now it looks as if the researchers are even on the track of a mechanism which may have existed before the green plants appeared on earth. The international science journal Nature publishes the news on 25 March 2010.
    The unravelling of the new oxygen producing pathway was difficult because the responsible microbe grows only very slowly and remained hidden inside a complex microbial community. For this reason, short DNA fragments were extracted from the community as a whole and sequenced with modern massive parallel sequencing technology. From these fragments the genome of the responsible bacterium could be stitched together. This demanding approach has been successful only a few times before. It was achieved by Denis Le Paslier and colleagues of Genoscope (Evry, France).

    The genome showed very clearly that the known genes for nitrite reduction were missing and that the organism was genetically dependent on oyygen. "The experimental and genetic data were clearly incompatible" says Marc Strous, who led the research effort in Nijmegen and has moved to the Max Planck Institute in Bremen in the meantime.

    Giving these circumstances how was the organism able to obtain its energy from the oxidation of the relatively inert molecule methane (CH4) with nitrite (NO2-) as electron acceptor? That is like starting a fire under water. To solve this paradox, Marcel Kuypers and colleagues of the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology were called to the rescue. Advanced microsensing and mass spectrometry confirmed that the paradox was real - both data were right and could only be explained by a new way of oxygen production. After one year of trying, Katharina Ettwig, who hopes to graduate on this work this year, was able to actually trap the oxygen and provide the experimental proof. She named the organism Methylomirabilis oxyfera (wonderful methane-eater making oxygen ), as it uses two nitric oxide molecules to produce dinitrogen and oxygen which is then used to attack the inert methane molecule.

    The scientists suggest that the newly discovered pathway of oxygen production may be a missing link that once, billions of years ago, made possible the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis, now performed by plants. But it certainly forces a rethink of current understanding of the role of fertilizers in the methane cycle.

    Nitrite-driven anaerobic methane oxidation by oxygenic bacteria. Nature 25 march 2010.
    Katharina F. Ettwig, Margaret K. Butler, Denis Le Paslier, Eric Pelletier
    Sophie Mangenot, Marcel M.M. Kuypers, Frank Schreiber, Johannes Zedelius, Dirk
    de Beer, Bas E. Dutilh, Jolein Gloerich, Hans J.C.T. Wessels, Theo van Alen
    Francisca Luesken, Ming L. Wu, Katinka T. van de Pas-Schoonen, Huub J.M. Op den Camp, Eva M. Janssen-Megens, Kees-Jan Francoijs, Henk Stunnenberg, Jean
    Weissenbach, Mike S.M. Jetten & Marc Strous.
    doi: 10.1038/nature08883

    Contact
    Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Celsiusstr. 1,
    D-28359 Bremen, Germany
    Prof. Dr. Marc Strous, Phone:+49 421 2028 822 e-mail: mstrousmpi-bremen.de
    Press officer
    Dr. Manfred Schloesser
    Phone:+49 421 2028 - 704 Fax:+49 421 2028 - 790
    e-mail: mschloesmpi-bremen.de

    Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
    Prof. dr. ir. Mike Jetten,
    Phone: +31 24 365 2941 e-mail m.jettenscience.ru.nl
    Katharina Ettwig
    Phone +31 24 365 2557 e-mail K.Ettwigscience.ru.nl


    More information:

    http://www.mpi-bremen.de/en/Home.html Homepage of the Max Planck Institute


    Images

    Microscopic image of the organism under fluorescent light.
    Microscopic image of the organism under fluorescent light.
    Source: Marc Strous

    Set-up at the Max Planck Institute to solve the puzzle. Sensors analysed nitrogen, methane and other nitrogen species and special tubes connected directly to the mass spectrometer.
    Set-up at the Max Planck Institute to solve the puzzle. Sensors analysed nitrogen, methane and other ...
    Source: Marc Strous


    Criteria of this press release:
    Biology, Chemistry, Environment / ecology, Geosciences, Oceanology / climate
    transregional, national
    Cooperation agreements, Research results
    English


     

    Microscopic image of the organism under fluorescent light.


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    Set-up at the Max Planck Institute to solve the puzzle. Sensors analysed nitrogen, methane and other nitrogen species and special tubes connected directly to the mass spectrometer.


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