Nitrogen Fixation by Anaerobes is Stimulated by Low Oxygen and Insensitive to Combined Nitrogen in Coastal Sediments

Bethany D. Jenkins1, Rodrigue Spinette2, Annaliese Jones2, Gavino Puggioni3, Andraya Ehrlich4 and Shelley M Brown5, (1)University of Rhode Island, Cell and Molecular Biology and Graduate School of Oceanography, Narragansett, RI, United States, (2)University of Rhode Island, Cell and Molecular Biology and Graduate School of Oceanography, Kingston, RI, United States, (3)University of Rhode Island, Computer Science and Statistics, Kingston, RI, United States, (4)Mount Sinai Hospital, Connecticut Sequencing Lab, New London, CT, United States, (5)Sailors for the Sea, Newport, RI, United States
Abstract:
Coastal sediments are typically zones of nitrogen removal via coupled nitrification-denitrification pathways. Increasingly, there are reports of nitrogen fixation in anthropogenically impacted sediments containing ample combined nitrogen. In previous work in the estuarine sediments of Narragansett Bay, we found that anaerobes related to Desulfovibrio spp. and in the Desulfuromonadales express genes for nitrogen fixation (nifH). We also determined that nitrogen fixation rates and gene expression are elevated during periods of seasonal hypoxia. Statistical modeling shows that a combination of elevated phytoplankton biomass as with a duration of hypoxia for a week or longer lead to conditions that promote nitrogen fixation as measured by acetylene reduction. Interestingly, diazotrophs closely related to those identified in Narragansett Bay are present and active in other low oxygen systems, suggesting that expansion of hypoxic events may lead to unanticipated consequences for the benthic nitrogen cycle in many ecosystems. To determine controls on diazotrophy on the organismal level, we isolated and sequenced the genomes of two Narragansett Bay members of the Desulfovibrio. We found that these organisms are insensitive to nitrate and urea, as they are missing the genes to assimilate these nitrogen sources. However, their nitrogen fixation is suppressed by increasing concentrations of ammonium, indicating that they may be sensitive to this nitrogen source in the environment. The paradox of detectable nitrogen fixation in the background of measurable ammonium in estuarine systems is a newly emergent theme and suggests that there are complex microbial interactions and/or structure to the nutrient regimes allowing for fixation.