Abstract

Intact cells obtained from Thiobacillus denitrificans grown autotrophically with thiosulfate as the oxidizable substrate and nitrate as the final electron acceptor catalyzed the reduction of nitrate, nitrite and nitric oxide stoichiometrically to nitrogen gas with the concomitant oxidation of thiosulfate. In addition, nitrous oxide was also capable of acting as the terminal oxidant of the respiratory chain with thiosulfate as the reductant. The anaerobic oxidation of thiosulfate by NO3 -, NO, and N2O was sensitive to the flavoprotein inhibitors, antimycin A or NHQNO, and cyanide or azide thus, implicating the participation of flavins, and cytochromes of b-, c-, and a-types in the denitrification process. The nitrite reductase system, however, was not markedly affected by the electron transport chain inhibitors. The experimental observations suggest that the dissimilatory nitrate reduction in the chemoautotroph T. denitrificans involves nitrite, nitric oxide, and nitrous oxide as theintermediates with nitrogen gas as the final reduction product.

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