Biological Nitrogen Removal Database

A manually curated data resource for microbial nitrogen removal


Detailed information

Microorganism

Vibrio sp. R-52915

Taxonomy

  • Phylum : Proteobacteria
  • Class : Gammaproteobacteria
  • Order : Vibrionales
  • Family : Vibrionaceae
  • Genus : Vibrio

Isolation Source

Marine Sediment

Enzyme Name

Nitrite reductase 

  • Encoding Gene:nrfA
  • DNA Size:194 bp
  • Nucleotide FASTA sequence: Link

  • UniProt I.D: A0A0R9XJ10

Protein Information

  • Pro_GenBank I.D: ALD88863.1

  • Length:65 aa
  • Protein FASTA_sequence: Link

Information about Article

  • Reference:Decleyre et al., 2015
  • Title:Dissimilatory nitrogen reduction in intertidal sediments of a temperate estuary: small scale heterogeneity and novel nitrate-to-ammonium reducers
  • Pubmed ID:26528270
  • Pubmed link: Link

  • Full research link: Link

  • Abstract:The estuarine nitrogen cycle can be substantially altered due to anthropogenic activities resulting in increased amounts of inorganic nitrogen (mainly nitrate). In the past, denitrification was considered to be the main ecosystem process removing reactive nitrogen from the estuarine ecosystem. However, recent reports on the contribution of dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) to nitrogen removal in these systems indicated a similar or higher importance, although the ratio between both processes remains ambiguous. Compared to denitrification, DNRA has been underexplored for the last decades and the key organisms carrying out the process in marine environments are largely unknown. Hence, as a first step to better understand the interplay between denitrification, DNRA and reduction of nitrate to nitrite in estuarine sediments, nitrogen reduction potentials were determined in sediments of the Paulina polder mudflat (Westerschelde estuary). We observed high variability in dominant nitrogen removing processes over a short distance (1.6 m), with nitrous oxide, ammonium and nitrite production rates differing significantly between all sampling sites. Denitrification occurred at all sites, DNRA was either the dominant process (two out of five sites) or absent, while nitrate reduction to nitrite was observed in most sites but never dominant. In addition, novel nitrate-to-ammonium reducers assigned to Thalassospira, Celeribacter, and Halomonas, for which DNRA was thus far unreported, were isolated, with DNRA phenotype reconfirmed through nrfA gene amplification. This study demonstrates high small scale heterogeneity among dissimilatory nitrate reduction processes in estuarine sediments and provides novel marine DNRA organisms that represent valuable alternatives to the current model organisms.