Abstract

Cable bacteria (CB) are filamentous Desulfobulbaceae that split the energy-conserving reaction of sulfide oxidation into two half reactions occurring in distinct cells. CB can use nitrate, but the reduction pathway is unknown, making it difficult to assess their direct impact on the N-cycle. Here we show that the freshwater cable bacterium Ca. Electronema sp. GS performs dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA). 15NO3--amended sediment with Ca. Electronema sp. GS showed higher rates of DNRA and nitrite production than sediment without Ca. Electronema sp. GS. Electron flux from sulfide oxidation, inferred from electric potential (EP) measurements, matched the electron flux needed to drive CB-mediated nitrate reduction to nitrite and ammonium. Ca. Electronema sp. GS expressed a complete nap operon for periplasmic nitrate reduction to nitrite, and a putative octaheme cytochrome c (pOCC), whose involvement in nitrite reduction to ammonium remains to be verified. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that the capacity for DNRA was acquired in multiple events through horizontal gene transfer from different organisms, before CB split into different salinity niches. The architecture of the nitrate reduction system suggests absence of energy conservation through oxidative phosphorylation, indicating that CB primarily conserve energy through the half reaction of sulfide oxidation.

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