Biological Nitrogen Removal Database

A manually curated data resource for microbial nitrogen removal


Detailed information

Microorganism

Uncultured fungus

Taxonomy

  • Phylum : nan
  • Class : nan
  • Order : nan
  • Family : nan
  • Genus : nan

Isolation Source

Agricultural soil

Enzyme Name

copper-containing nitrite reductase 

  • Encoding Gene:NirK
  • DNA Size:432 bp
  • Nucleotide FASTA sequence: Link

  • UniProt I.D: V5LT77

Protein Information

  • Pro_GenBank I.D: AHA56402.1

  • Length:144 aa
  • Protein FASTA_sequence: Link

Information about Article

  • Reference:Long et al., 2015
  • Title:Detection and diversity of copper containing nitrite reductase genes (nirK) in prokaryotic and fungal communities of agricultural soils
  • Pubmed ID:25764542.0
  • Pubmed link: Link

  • Full research link: Link

  • Abstract:Microorganisms are capable of producing N2 and N2O gases as the end products of denitrification. Copper-containing nitrite reductase (NirK), a key enzyme in the microbial N-cycle, has been found in bacteria, archaea and fungi. This study seeks to assess the diversity of nirK genes in the prokaryotic and fungal communities of agricultural soils in the United States. New primers targeting the nirK genes in fungi were developed, while nirK genes in archaea and bacteria were detected using previously published methods. The new primers were able to detect fungal nirK genes as well as bacterial nirK genes from a group that could not be observed with previously published primers. Based on the sequence analyses from three different primer sets, five clades of nirK genes were identified, which were associated with soil archaea, ammonium-oxidizing bacteria, denitrifying bacteria and fungi. The diversity of nirK genes in the two denitrifying bacteria clades was higher than the diversity found in other clades. Using a newly designed primer set, this study showed the detection of fungal nirK genes from environmental samples. The newly designed PCR primers in this study enhance the ability to detect the diversity of nirK-encoding microorganisms in soils.