Azotobacter beijerinckii was grown in ammonia-free glucose-mineral salts media in batch culture and in chemostat cultures limited by the supply of glucose, oxygen or molecular nitrogen. In batch culture poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate was formed towards the end of exponential growth and accumulated to about 74% of the cell dry weight. In chemostat cultures little poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate accumulated in organisms that were nitrogen-limited, but when oxygen limited a much increased yield of cells per mol of glucose was observed, and the organisms contained up to 50% of their dry weight of poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate. In carbon-limited cultures (D, the dilution rate,=0.035-0.240h(-1)), the growth yield ranged from 13.1 to 19.8g/mol of glucose and the poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate content did not exceed 3.0% of the dry weight. In oxygen-limited cultures (D=0.049-0.252h(-1)) the growth yield ranged from 48.4 to 70.1g/mol of glucose and the poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate content was between 19.6 and 44.6% of dry weight. In nitrogen-limited cultures (D=0.053-0.255h(-1)) the growth yield ranged from 7.45 to 19.9g/mol of glucose and the poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate content was less than 1.5% of dry weight. The sudden imposition of oxygen limitation on a nitrogen-limited chemostat culture produced a rapid increase in poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate content and cell yield. Determinations on chemostat cultures revealed that during oxygen-limited steady states (D=0.1h(-1)) the oxygen uptake decreased to 100mul h(-1) per mg dry wt. compared with 675 for a glucose-limited culture (D=0.1h(-1)). Nitrogen-limited cultures had CO(2) production values in situ ranging from 660 to 1055mul h(-1) per mg dry wt. at growth rates of 0.053-0.234h(-1) and carbon-limited cultures exhibited a variation of CO(2) production between 185 and 1328mul h(-1) per mg dry wt. at growth rates between 0.035 and 0.240h(-1). These findings are discussed in relation to poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate formation, growth efficiency and growth yield during growth on glucose. We suggest that poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate is produced in response to oxygen limitation and represents not only a store of carbon and energy but also an electron sink into which excess of reducing power can be channelled.
1. Cells of Nitrosomonas europaea produced N(2)O during the oxidation of ammonia and hydroxylamine. 2. The end-product of ammonia oxidation, nitrite, was the predominant source of N(2)O in cells. 3. Cells also produced N(2)O, but not N(2) gas, by the reduction of nitrite under anaerobic conditions. 4. Hydroxylamine was oxidized by cell-free extracts to yield nitrite and N(2)O aerobically, but to yield N(2)O and NO anaerobically. 5. Cell extracts reduced nitrite both aerobically and anaerobically to NO and N(2)O with hydroxylamine as an electron donor. 6. The relative amounts of NO and N(2)O produced during hydroxylamine oxidation and/or nitrite reduction are dependent on the type of artificial electron acceptor utilized. 7. Partially purified hydroxylamine oxidase retained nitrite reductase activity but cytochrome oxidase was absent. 8. There is a close association of hydroxylamine oxidase and nitrite reductase activities in purified preparations.
A soluble acetoacetyl-CoA reductase (EC 1.1.1.36) was purified 54-fold from Azotobacter beijerinckii N.C.I.B. 9067 and the reaction product identified as d(-)-beta-hydroxybutyryl-CoA. The Michaelis constants for acetoacetyl-CoA, NADPH and NADH were determined and the reaction rate was found to be some fivefold greater with NADPH than with NADH. At neutral pH the equilibrium greatly favours the formation of the reduced product. Substrate specificity was in the order: acetoacetyl-CoA>acetoacetylpantetheine>acetoacetyl-(acyl-carrier protein). The enzyme possesses a functional thiol group, suffers inactivation by oxygen and is inhibited by thiol-blocking reagents. Inhibition by p-chloromercuribenzoate is reversed by excess of dithiothreitol, which also protects the enzyme from inactivation by oxygen.
Nitrite reductase has been separated from cell-free extracts of Nitrosomonas and partially purified from hydroxylamine oxidase by polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. In its oxidized state the enzyme, which did not contain haem, had an extinction maximum at 590nm, which was abolished on reduction. Sodium diethyldithiocarbamate was a potent inhibitor of nitrite reductase. Enzyme activity was stimulated 2.5-fold when remixed with hydroxylamine oxidase, but was unaffected by mammalian cytochrome c. The enzyme also exhibited a low hydroxylamine-dependent nitrite reductase activity. The results suggest that this enzyme is similar to the copper-containing ;denitrifying enzyme' of Pseudomonas denitrificans. A dithionite-reduced, 465nm-absorbing haemoprotein was associated with homogeneous preparations of hydroxylamine oxidase. The band at 465nm maximum was not reduced during the oxidation of hydroxylamine although the extinction was abolished on addition of hydroxylamine, NO(2) (-) or CO. These last-named compounds when added to the oxidized enzyme precluded the appearance of the 465nm-absorption band on addition of dithionite. Several properties of 465nm-absorbing haemoprotein are described.
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