4.6 Article

Enriched iron(III)-reducing bacterial communities are shaped by carbon substrate and iron oxide mineralogy

期刊

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
卷 3, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00404

关键词

Fe; iron oxides; iron reduction; sulfate reduction; cultivation; niche differentiation

资金

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE-0946799, DGE-1144152]
  2. Department of Energy, Office of Biological, and Environmental Research
  3. National Institutes of Health, National Center for Research Resources, Biomedical Technology Program

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Iron (Fe) oxides exist in a spectrum of structures in the environment, with fernhydrite widely considered the most bioavailable phase. Yet, ferrihydrite is unstable and rapidly transforms to more crystalline Fe(III) oxides (e.g., goethite, hematite), which are poorly reduced by model dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms. This begs the question, what processes and microbial groups are responsible for reduction of crystalline Fe(III) oxides within sedimentary environments? Further, how do changes in Fe mineralogy shape oxide hosted microbial populations? To address these questions, we conducted a largescale cultivation effort using various Fe(III) oxides (ferrihydrite, goethite, hematite) and carbon substrates (glucose, lactate, acetate) along a dilution gradient to enrich for microbial populations capable of reducing Fe oxides spanning a wide range of crystallinities and reduction potentials. While carbon source was the most important variable shaping community composition within Fe(III)-reducing enrichments, both Fe oxide type and sediment dilution also had a substantial influence. For instance, with acetate as the carbon source, only ferrihydrite enrichments displayed a significant amount of Fe(III) reduction and the wellknown dissimilatory metal reducer Geobacter sp. was the dominant organism enriched. In contrast, when glucose and lactate were provided, all three Fe oxides were reduced and reduction coincided with the presence of fermentative (e.g., Enterobacter spp.) and sulfate-reducing bacteria (e.g., Desulfovibrio spp.). Thus, changes in Fe oxide structure and resource availability may shift Fe(III)-reducing communities between dominantly metalrespiring to fermenting and/or sulfate-reducing organisms which are capable of reducing more recalcitrant Fe phases. These findings highlight the need for further targeted investigations into the composition and activity of speciation-directed metal-reducing populations within natural environments.

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