Nitrogen fixation by Rhodospirillum rubrum grown in nitrogen-limited continuous culture.

Journal of Bacteriology
T O Munson, R H Burris

Abstract

Cell-free extracts of the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum were inconsistent in reducing N(2). An internally illuminated fermentor, designed for the continuous culture of this organism on N(2) under nitrogen-limited conditions, produced cells which yielded cell extracts with consistent activity for cell-free N(2) fixation. A nitrogen-limited continuous culture, supplied ammonia rather than N(2), gave cell-free extracts with even more active N(2) fixation. Extracts of cells grown in the fermentor with glutamate nitrogen as the limiting nutrient in continuous culture did not reduce N(2), but whole cells fixed (15)N-enriched N(2). The discovery that cells from ammonia and glutamate nitrogen-limited continuous cultures are capable of N(2) reduction suggests that R. rubrum cells produce the N(2)-reducing enzymes in response to conditions of nitrogen deficiency rather than in response to the presence of N(2). Examination of the effect of the pN(2) on N(2) reduction by cell-free preparations of R. rubrum indicated that the K(N(2)) is approximately 0.071 atm. Cell-free extracts from R. rubrum were tested for their ability to reduce substrates other than N(2).

Citations

Jan 1, 1987·Critical Reviews in Microbiology·P C Hallenbeck
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Aug 1, 1980·Journal of Dairy Science·D M SchaeferM P Bryant
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