Production of nitrous oxide from nitrite in Klebsiella pneumoniae: mutants altered in nitrogen metabolism.

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RESUMO

Under anaerobic conditions, Klebsiella pneumoniae reduced nitrite (NO2-), yielding nitrous oxide (N2O) and ammonium ions (NH4+) as products. Nitrous oxide formation accounted for about 5% of the total NO2- reduced, and NH4+ production accounted for the remainder. Glucose and pyruvate were the electron donors for NO2- reduction to N2O by whole cells, whereas glucose, NADH, and NADPH were found to be the electron donors when cell extracts were used. On the one hand, formate failed to serve as an electron donor for NO2- reduction to N2O and NH4+, whereas on the other hand, formate was the best electron donor for nitrate reduction in either whole cells or cell extracts. Mutants that are defective in the reduction of NO2- to NH4+ were isolated, and these strains were found to produce N2O at rates comparable to that of the parent strain. These results suggest that the nitrite reductase producing N2O is distinct from that producing NH4+. Nitrous oxide production from nitric oxide (NO) occurred in all mutants tested, at rates comparable to that of the parent strain. This result suggests that NO reduction to N2O, which also uses NADH as the electron donor, is independent of the protein(s) catalyzing the reduction of NO2- to N2O.

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