2020 journal article

Copper limiting threshold in the terrestrial ammonia oxidizing archaeon Nitrososphaera viennensis

RESEARCH IN MICROBIOLOGY, 171(3-4), 134–142.

co-author countries: Austria 🇦🇹 United States of America 🇺🇸
MeSH headings : Ammonia / metabolism; Archaea / growth & development; Archaea / isolation & purification; Archaea / metabolism; Chromatography, Liquid; Copper / metabolism; Mass Spectrometry; Nitrification; Nitrites / metabolism; Oxidation-Reduction; Soil Microbiology
Source: Web Of Science
Added: July 13, 2020

Ammonia oxidizing archaea (AOA) inhabiting soils have a central role in the global nitrogen cycle. Copper (Cu) is central to many enzymes in AOA including ammonia monooxygenase (AMO), the enzyme involved in the first step of ammonia oxidation. This study explored the physiological response of the AOA soil isolate, Nitrososphaera viennensis (EN76T) to Cu-limiting conditions in order to approach its limiting threshold under laboratory conditions. The chelator TETA (1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane N, N′, N″, N‴-tetraacetic acid hydrochloride hydrate) with selective affinity for Cu2+ was used to lower bioavailable Cu2+ in culture experiments as predicted by thermodynamic speciation calculations. Results show that N. viennensis is Cu-limited at concentrations ≤10−15 mol L−1 free Cu2+ compared to standard conditions (10−12 mol L−1). This Cu2+ limiting threshold is similar to pure cultures of denitrifying bacteria and other AOA and AOB inhabiting soils, freshwaters and sewage (<10−16 mol L−1), and lower than pure cultures of the marine AOA Nitrosopumilus maritimus (<10−12.7 mol L−1), which also possesses a high amount of Cu-dependent enzymes.