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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 1999, p. 3272-3278, Vol. 65, No. 8
Department of Marine Sciences, and Department
of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Groton,
Connecticut 06340
Received 16 March 1999/Accepted 18 May 1999
Several low-molecular-weight sulfonates were added to microbial mat
slurries to investigate their effects on sulfate reduction. Instantaneous production of sulfide occurred after taurine and cysteate
were added to all of the microbial mats tested. The rates of production
in the presence of taurine and cysteate were 35 and 24 µM
HS
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Low-Molecular-Weight Sulfonates, a Major Substrate
for Sulfate Reducers in Marine Microbial Mats
h
1 in a stromatolite mat, 38 and 36 µM
HS
h
1 in a salt pond mat, and 27 and 18 µM HS
h
1 in a salt marsh mat,
respectively. The traditionally used substrates lactate and acetate
stimulated the rate of sulfide production 3 to 10 times more than
taurine and cysteate stimulated the rate of sulfide production in all
mats, but when ethanol, glycolate, and glutamate were added to
stromatolite mat slurries, the resulting increases were similar to the
increases observed with taurine and cysteate. Isethionate,
sulfosuccinate, and sulfobenzoate were tested only with the
stromatolite mat slurry, and these compounds had much smaller effects
on sulfide production. Addition of molybdate resulted in a greater
inhibitory effect on acetate and lactate utilization than on sulfonate
use, suggesting that different metabolic pathways were involved. In all
of the mats tested taurine and cysteate were present in the pore water
at nanomolar to micromolar concentrations. An enrichment culture from
the stromatolite mat was obtained on cysteate in a medium lacking
sulfate and incubated anaerobically. The rate of cysteate consumption
by this enrichment culture was 1.6 pmol cell
1
h
1. Compared to the results of slurry studies, this rate
suggests that organisms with properties similar to the properties of
this enrichment culture are a major constituent of the sulfidogenic population. In addition, taurine was consumed at some of highest dilutions obtained from most-probable-number enrichment cultures obtained from stromatolite samples. Based on our comparison of the
sulfide production rates found in various mats, low-molecular-weight sulfonates are important sources of C and S in these ecosystems.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Marine Sciences, University of Connecticut, 1084 Shennecossett Road, Groton, CT 06340. Phone: (860) 405-9159. Fax: (860) 405-9153. E-mail:
pieter.visscher{at}uconn.edu.
This is RIBS contribution number 03.
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