Abstract

Denitrification, the reduction of nitrogen oxides (NO 3 − and NO 2 −) to N 2 via the intermediates NO and N 2O, is crucial for nitrogen turnover in soils. Cultivation-independent approaches that applied nitrite reductase genes ( nirK/ nirS) as marker genes to detect denitrifiers showed a predominance of genes presumably derived from as yet uncultured organisms. However, the phylogenetic affiliation of these organisms remains unresolved since the ability to denitrify is widespread among phylogenetically unrelated organisms. In this study, denitrifiers were cultured using a strategy to generally enrich soil microorganisms. Of 490 colonies screened, eight nirK-containing isolates were phylogenetically identified (16S rRNA genes) as members of the Rhizobiales. A nirK gene related to a large cluster of sequences from uncultured bacteria mainly retrieved from soil was found in three isolates classified as Bradyrhizobium sp. Additional isolates were classified as Bradyrhizobium japonicum and Bosea sp. that contained nirK genes also closely related to the nirK from these strains. These isolates denitrified, albeit with different efficiencies. In Devosia sp., nirK was the only denitrification gene detected. Two Mesorhizobium sp. isolates contained a nirK gene also related to nirK from cultured Mesorhizobia and uncultured soil bacteria but no gene encoding nitric oxide or nitrous oxide reductase. These isolates accumulated NO under nitrate-reducing conditions without growth, presumably due to the lethal effects of NO. This showed the presence of a functional nitrite reductase but lack of a nitric oxide reductase. In summary, similar nirK genotypes recurrently detected mainly in soils likely originated from Rhizobia, and functional differences were presumably strain-dependent.

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