4.8 Article

Nitrogen fixation by symbiotic and free-living spirochetes

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 292, Issue 5526, Pages 2495-2498

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1060281

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Spirochetes from termite hindguts and freshwater sediments possessed homologs of a nitrogenase gene (nifH) and exhibited nitrogenase activity, a previously unrecognized metabolic capability in spirochetes. Fixation of 15-dinitrogen was demonstrated with termite gut Treponema ZAS-9 and free-living Spirochaeta aurantia. Homologs of nifH were also present in human oral and bovine ruminal treponemes. Results implicate spirochetes in the nitrogen nutrition of termites, whose food is typically Low in nitrogen, and in global nitrogen cycling. These results also proffer spirochetes as a Likely origin of certain nifHs observed in termite guts and other environments that were not previously attributable to known microbes.

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