Title: NITROGEN FIXATION
1NITROGEN FIXATION
2Nitrogen Fixation
- The growth of all organisms depend on the
availability of Nitrogen (e.g. amino acids) - Nitrogen in the form of Dinitrogen (N2) makes up
80 of the air we breathe but is essentially
inert due to the triple bond (N?N) - In order for nitrogen to be used for growth it
must be "fixed" (combined) in the form of
ammonium (NH4) or nitrate (NO3) ions.
3Nitrogen Fixation
- The nitrogen molecule (N2) is quite inert. To
break it apart so that its atoms can combine with
other atoms requires the input of substantial
amounts of energy.
- Three processes are responsible for most of the
nitrogen fixation in the biosphere - atmospheric fixation
- biological fixation
- industrial fixation
4Industrial Fixation
- Under great pressure, at a temperature of 600oC,
and with the use of a catalyst, atmospheric
nitrogen and hydrogen (usually derived from
natural gas or petroleum) can be combined to form
ammonia (NH3). - Ammonia can be used directly as fertilizer, but
most of its is further processed to urea and
ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3).
5Changing Nitrogen Cycle
Humans have doubled the N fixation rates over
natural levels
Haber-Bosch 3CH4 6H2O --gt 3CO2 12H2
4N212H2 --gt 8NH3 (high T,press)
6Nitrogen Fixation Process
- Energetics
- N?N
- Haber-Bosch (100-200 atm, 400-500C, 8,000 kcal
kg-1 N) - Nitrogenase (4,000 kcal kg-1 N)
7Biological Fixation
- The ability to fix nitrogen is found only in
certain bacteria. - Some live in a symbiotic relationship with plants
of the legume family (e.g., soybeans, alfalfa). - Some establish symbiotic relationships with
plants other than legumes (e.g., alders). - Some nitrogen-fixing bacteria live free in the
soil. - Nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria are essential to
maintaining the fertility of semi-aquatic
environments like rice paddies.
8Biological Fixation cont.
- Biological nitrogen fixation requires a complex
set of enzymes and a huge expenditure of ATP. - Although the first stable product of the process
is ammonia, this is quickly incorporated into
protein and other organic nitrogen compounds. - Scientist estimate that biological fixation
globally adds approximately 140 million metric
tons of nitrogen to ecosystems every year.
9Some nitrogen fixing organisms
- Free living aerobic bacteria
- Azotobacter
- Beijerinckia
- Klebsiella
- Cyanobacteria (lichens)
- Free living anaerobic bacteria
- Clostridium
- Desulfovibrio
- Purple sulphur bacteria
- Purple non-sulphur bacteria
- Green sulphur bacteria
- Free living associative bacteria
- Azospirillum
- Symbionts
- Rhizobium (legumes)
- Frankia (alden trees)
10Some nitrogen fixing organisms
11Estimated Average Rates of Biological N2 Fixation
12Rank of Biological Nitrogen Fixation
13Nitrogen Fixation
- All nitrogen fixing bacteria use highly conserved
enzyme complex called Nitrogenase - Nitrogenase is composed of of two subunits an
iron-sulfur protein and a molybdenum-iron-sulfur
protein - Aerobic organisms face special challenges to
nitrogen fixation because nitrogenase is
inactivated when oxygen reacts with the iron
component of the proteins
14Nitrogenase
FeMo Cofactor
Fd(ox)
N2 8H
Fd(red)
8e-
2NH3 H2
nMgATP
nMgADP nPi
4C2H2 8H 4C2H2
Dinitrogenase reductase
Dinitrogenase
N2 8H 8e- 16 MgATP ? 2NH3 H2 16MgADP
15Nitrogenase
16Genetics of Nitrogenase
17Types of Biological Nitrogen Fixation
- Free-living (asymbiotic)
- Cyanobacteria
- Azotobacter
- Associative
- RhizosphereAzospirillum
- Lichenscyanobacteria
- Leaf nodules
- Symbiotic
- Legume-rhizobia
- Actinorhizal-Frankia
18Free-living N2 Fixation
- Energy
- 20-120 g C used to fix 1 g N
- Combined Nitrogen
- nif genes tightly regulated
- Inhibited at low NH4 and NO3- (1 µg g-1 soil,
300 µM) - Oxygen
- Avoidance (anaerobes)
- Microaerophilly
- Respiratory protection
- Specialized cells (heterocysts, vesicles)
- Spatial/temporal separation
- Conformational protection
19Heterocyst
20Associative N2 Fixation
- Phyllosphere or rhizosphere (tropical grasses)
- Azosprillum, Acetobacter
- 1 to 10 of rhizosphere population
- Some establish within root
- Same energy and oxygen limitations as free-living
- Acetobacter diazotrophicus lives in internal
tissue of sugar cane, grows in 30 sucrose, can
reach populations of 106 to 107 cells g-1 tissue,
and fix 100 to 150 kg N ha-1 y-1
21Phototrophic N2-fixing Associations
- Lichenscyanobacteria and fungi
- Mosses and liverwortssome have associated
cyanobacteria - Azolla-Anabaena (Nostoc)cyanobacteria in stem of
water fern - C Gunnera-Nostoccyanobacteria in stem nodule of
dicot - C Cycas-Nostoccyanobacteria in roots of
gymnosperm
22Azolla pinnata (left) 1cm. Anabaena from crushed
leaves Of Azolla.
23Simbiosis Anabaena-Azolla
24Frankia and Actinorhizal Plants
- Actinomycetes (Gram , filamentous) septate
hyphae spores in sporangia thick-walled vesicles
Frankia vesicles showing thick walls that confer
protection from oxygen. Bars are 100 nm.
25(No Transcript)
26Actinorhizal Plant Hosts
27Legume-Rhizobium Symbiosis
- The subfamilies of legumes (Caesalpinioideae,
Mimosoideae, Papilionoideae), 700 genera, and
19,700 species of legumes - Only about 15 of the species have been evaluated
for nodulation - Rhizobium
- Gram -, rod
- Most studied symbiotic N2-fixing bacteria
- Now subdivided into several genera
- Many genes known that are involved in nodulation
(nod, nol, noe genes)
28Taxonomy of Rhizobia
29Rhizobium Root Nodules
The picture above shows a clover root nodule.
Available from Internet
30Rhizobium Root Nodules
31A few legumes (such as Sesbania rostrata) have
stem nodules as well as root nodules. Stem
nodules (arrows) are capable of photosynthesis as
well as nitrogen fixation.
32Formation of a Root Nodule
33Nodulation in Legumes
34Infection Process
- Attachment
- Root hair curling
- Localized cell wall degradation
- Infection thread
- Cortical cell differentiation
- Rhizobia released into cytoplasm
- Bacterioid differentiation (symbiosome formation)
- Induction of nodulins
35Role of Root Exudates
- General
- Amino sugars, sugars
- Specific
- Flavones (luteolin), isoflavones (genistein),
flavanones, chalcones - Inducers/repressors of nod genes
- Vary by plant species
- Responsiveness varies by rhizobia species
36nod Gene Expression
Common nod genes
Nod factorLCO (lipo-chitin oligosaccharide)
37Nodule Metabolism
- Oxygen metabolism
- Variable diffusion barrier
- Leghemoglobin
- Nitrogen metabolism
- NH3 diffuses to cytosol
- Assimilation by GOGAT
- Conversion to organic-N for transport
- Carbon metabolism
- Sucrose converted to dicarboxylic acids
- Functioning TCA in bacteroids
- C stored in nodules as starch
38Anaerobic Culture Methods
39Anaerobic Culture Methods
40Enrichment Media
- Encourages growth of desired microbe
- Assume a soil sample contains a few
phenol-degrading bacteria and thousands of other
bacteria - Inoculate phenol-containing culture medium with
the soil and incubate - Transfer 1 ml to another flask of the phenol
medium and incubate - Transfer 1 ml to another flask of the phenol
medium and incubate - Only phenol-metabolizing bacteria will be growing
41Selective Media
- Suppress unwanted microbes and encourage desired
microbes.
42Streak Plate
43Plate Count
- After incubation, count colonies on plates that
have 25-250 colonies (CFUs)