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Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat

Hydrogen production by microorganisms is often described as a promising sustainable and clean energy source, but still faces several obstacles, which prevent practical application. Among them, oxygen sensitivity of hydrogenases represents one of the major limitations hampering the biotechnological i...

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Autores principales: Roumagnac, Philippe, Richaud, Pierre, Barakat, Mohamed, Ortet, Philippe, Roncato, Marie-Anne, Heulin, Thierry, Peltier, Gilles, Achouak, Wafa, Cournac, Laurent
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3535381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23233392
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.37
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author Roumagnac, Philippe
Richaud, Pierre
Barakat, Mohamed
Ortet, Philippe
Roncato, Marie-Anne
Heulin, Thierry
Peltier, Gilles
Achouak, Wafa
Cournac, Laurent
author_facet Roumagnac, Philippe
Richaud, Pierre
Barakat, Mohamed
Ortet, Philippe
Roncato, Marie-Anne
Heulin, Thierry
Peltier, Gilles
Achouak, Wafa
Cournac, Laurent
author_sort Roumagnac, Philippe
collection PubMed
description Hydrogen production by microorganisms is often described as a promising sustainable and clean energy source, but still faces several obstacles, which prevent practical application. Among them, oxygen sensitivity of hydrogenases represents one of the major limitations hampering the biotechnological implementation of photobiological production processes. Here, we describe a hierarchical biodiversity-based approach, including a chemochromic screening of hydrogenase activity of hundreds of bacterial strains collected from several ecosystems, followed by mass spectrometry measurements of hydrogenase activity of a selection of the H(2)-oxidizing bacterial strains identified during the screen. In all, 131 of 1266 strains, isolated from cereal rhizospheres and basins containing irradiating waste, were scored as H(2)-oxidizing bacteria, including Pseudomonas sp., Serratia sp., Stenotrophomonas sp., Enterobacter sp., Rahnella sp., Burkholderia sp., and Ralstonia sp. isolates. Four free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria harbored a high and oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase activity, which was not fully inhibited within entire cells up to 150–250 μmol/L O(2) concentration or within soluble protein extracts up to 25–30 μmol/L. The only hydrogenase-related genes that we could reveal in these strains were of the hyc type (subunits of formate hydrogenlyase complex). The four free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria were closely related to Enterobacter radicincitans based on the sequences of four genes (16S rRNA, rpoB, hsp60, and hycE genes). These results should bring interesting prospects for microbial biohydrogen production and might have ecophysiological significance for bacterial adaptation to the oxic–anoxic interfaces in the rhizosphere.
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spelling pubmed-35353812013-01-08 Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat Roumagnac, Philippe Richaud, Pierre Barakat, Mohamed Ortet, Philippe Roncato, Marie-Anne Heulin, Thierry Peltier, Gilles Achouak, Wafa Cournac, Laurent Microbiologyopen Original Research Hydrogen production by microorganisms is often described as a promising sustainable and clean energy source, but still faces several obstacles, which prevent practical application. Among them, oxygen sensitivity of hydrogenases represents one of the major limitations hampering the biotechnological implementation of photobiological production processes. Here, we describe a hierarchical biodiversity-based approach, including a chemochromic screening of hydrogenase activity of hundreds of bacterial strains collected from several ecosystems, followed by mass spectrometry measurements of hydrogenase activity of a selection of the H(2)-oxidizing bacterial strains identified during the screen. In all, 131 of 1266 strains, isolated from cereal rhizospheres and basins containing irradiating waste, were scored as H(2)-oxidizing bacteria, including Pseudomonas sp., Serratia sp., Stenotrophomonas sp., Enterobacter sp., Rahnella sp., Burkholderia sp., and Ralstonia sp. isolates. Four free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria harbored a high and oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase activity, which was not fully inhibited within entire cells up to 150–250 μmol/L O(2) concentration or within soluble protein extracts up to 25–30 μmol/L. The only hydrogenase-related genes that we could reveal in these strains were of the hyc type (subunits of formate hydrogenlyase complex). The four free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria were closely related to Enterobacter radicincitans based on the sequences of four genes (16S rRNA, rpoB, hsp60, and hycE genes). These results should bring interesting prospects for microbial biohydrogen production and might have ecophysiological significance for bacterial adaptation to the oxic–anoxic interfaces in the rhizosphere. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2012-12 2012-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3535381/ /pubmed/23233392 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.37 Text en © 2012 Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.
spellingShingle Original Research
Roumagnac, Philippe
Richaud, Pierre
Barakat, Mohamed
Ortet, Philippe
Roncato, Marie-Anne
Heulin, Thierry
Peltier, Gilles
Achouak, Wafa
Cournac, Laurent
Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
title Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
title_full Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
title_fullStr Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
title_full_unstemmed Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
title_short Reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living N(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
title_sort reversible oxygen-tolerant hydrogenase carried by free-living n(2)-fixing bacteria isolated from the rhizospheres of rice, maize, and wheat
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3535381/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23233392
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.37
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