Microbial Metabolism: Autotrophs
Last revised: Thursday, February 27, 2003
Reading: Ch. 9 in text
Overview of Autotrophy
- Imagine being hungry, walking outside, taking off your shirt, lying in the
sun for a few hours, becoming totally full (fat even!), and being done eating.
No stores, no lines, no choices, just
sunlight --- and the machinery of an
autotroph --- and some CO2 and a couple of other requirements (water --- and H2S
or Hydrogen gas, if you happen to be an anerobe)
- Autotroph = gets all carbon from CO2, organic C not required (for C-source). Use special metabolic
cycle: Calvin-Benson cycle (see handout)
- Refers to C-source only; some organisms still require organic C as energy
source
Calvin-Benson
cycle
- Pathway
details
- Each CO2 is added to a 5-C acceptor molecule (ribulose 1,5 bis-phosphate)
- Immediately split into two 3-C molecules (3-phosphoglyceric acid)
- Must add phosphate group (from ATP) and hydrogen (from NADPH) to get reduced
product, 3-phospho-glyceraldehyde (PGA)
- Cannot take all (PGA) as product --- must regenerate some more acceptor to
keep cycle going. How?
- Take 5 PGA molecules (5 x 3C = 15 C atoms). Rearrange through series of
reactions to make 3 5-C molecules (still 15 C atoms). Add ATP to each, make 3
acceptor molecules (ribulose 1,5 bis-phosphate)
- Net result: To get 1 PGA (3-C) as reduced product, need 3 CO2 molecules,
added to 3 acceptor molecules ----> six 3-C molecules, use 6ATP and 6NADPH
----> 6 PGA molecules; five of these are used to regenerate acceptor
molecules (+ 3ATP), one PGA can leave cycle and be used by cell.
- Actual cyce exports 3-C reduced molecules: look at balanced equation:
- 3 CO2 + 9 ATP + 6 NADPH -----> 3-phospho-glyceraldehyde (PGA) + 9 ADP + 9 NADP+
- Often want to look at balanced equation relative to 6C synthesis. Must multiply all terms in balanced equation above by two (since 2 PGA ~ 1 glucose)
- 6 CO2 + 18 ATP + 12 NADPH -----> glucose + 18 ADP + 12 NADP+
- Note for reaction: glucose + O2 ----> 6CO2 + 6 H2O; delta Go'= - 688kcal/mole
- If each ATP contains ~7.3 kcal/mole (from delta Go' for hydrolysis) and each
NADPH contains ~54 kcal/mole (from delta Go' for oxidation), then to make
glucose costs 780 kcal/mole, more than the energy available by oxidizing
glucose.
- Conclusion: making sugar is expensive! Cell needs to supply large quantities
of ATP and NADPH.
Hydrogen
Bacteria
- Gain energy by oxidizing hydrogen gas:
- H2 + NAD+ -------(hydrogenase enzyme)------> NADH +
H+
- alternative: electrons can be donated directly to ETS chain, bypassing NAD
- Note: only need one special enzyme to carry this step out: hydrogenase.
- Many different genera of bacteria include members that can induce
hydrogenase. When hydrogen disappears, back to heterotrophic life. Hydrogen bacteria are
usually facultative chemolithotrophs.
Sulfur
Bacteria
- Called "colorless" in contrast to chlorophyll-containing sulfur bacteria,
usually green or purple
- Oxidize sulfur compounds: Example: Thiobacillus
thiooxidans
thiosulfate: S2O3= ----->
SO4=
free sulfur: 2 So + 2 H2O + 3 O2 -----> 2
H2SO4
- Note product: sulfuric acid!! Cells can grow even in pH 0 (1M sulfuric acid).
But cell internal pH
is ~7, so difference across membrane can be 6 or 7 pH units.
- Acid mine drainage: common in Western Penn., E. Ohio, W. Virginia. Rivers can
run rust red. Mines have been major sources of pollution. Water seeps in,
sulfur deposits exposed during coal mining allow microbial growth ------>
megatons of H2SO4
- Sulfuric acid leaches out, dissolves iron, precipitates in river with
bicarbonate to form rusty deposits.
- Quantities involved: Ohio River carries 100 million tons of 98% conc. H2SO4
per year.
- To cure problem, must seal up old mines, prevent oxygen access. Also strip
mines must be promptly covered up once mining is done to block access of
microbes and oxygen to sulfur.
- Value of this reaction:
(a) farmers or gardeners can dump free S on
alkaline soil, bacteria will produce acid
(b) miners can use process to
recover Cu from low grade ores, where smelting is not economical.
Pile up mine "tailings" with copper ore; scrap shallow hole and fill with water. If tailings contain S, microbes will produce H2SO4. Now pump the acid over the tailings, Cu will be leached out and accumulate as soluble ions in acid pool. Eventually process the acid, recover Cu.
Nitrifying Bacteria
- Very important soil organisms -- process all ammonia, nitrite in soils, break
down amino acids, nitrogen bases ---> ammonia (NH3)
- Two different groups: one oxidizes ammonia, one oxidizes nitrite
Ex. 1: Nitrosomonas: 2 NH3 (ammonia) + 3 O2 -----> 2 HNO2 (nitrite) + 2 H2O
Ex. 2: Nitrobacter: 2 HNO2 (nitrite) + 2 O2 -----> 2 HNO3 (nitrate)
- Note potential problem: redox potential for nitrite as electron donor is +
0.42 v., so can easily pass electrons down to oxygen at + 0.82 v., reaction
will be spontaneous. Electrons can be passed
through an electron transport system, make ATP by chemiosmotic phosphorylation.
- BUT --- how to make NADPH? (remember, this an autotroph, needs both ATP and NADPH to grow). How to get NADPH? The redox potential is much higher than nitrite.
- Solution: Reverse electron transport. Accumulate enough proton
gradient by oxidation of nitrite to force electrons back to carriers with
higher redox potentials, all the way back to NADH ---> NADPH. This works as
long as concentrations of reduced forms are kept very low, and NADPH is used up
immediately to make glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate. See handout
- This is very inefficient process. Nitrobacter can have 18 hour
generation time. But it has no competition, so what's a little extra time?
Iron
Bacteria
- Curious discovery: Ferrobacillus ferrooxidans. Carries out oxidation
of iron: Fe++ (ferrous) ----> Fe+++ (ferric) +
e-
- Originally thought bacteria get energy from oxidation, make ATP.
But redox potential of Fe oxidation is + 0.78 v., and redox potential for
oxygen is + 0.86 v., so delta Eo' for aerobic respiration is only -0.08 v.,
calculated delta Go' is much less than the 7.3 kcal/mole needed to make ATP.
How does this organism grow?
- Answer: it only grows in very acidic habitats, pH less than 3. Found with
Thiobacillus thiooxidans, bacterium that produces sulfuric acid.
Ferrobacillus lives off the pH gradient created by acidic pH. This maintains
very high proton gradient. As H+ flows in, ATP gets made. But need
to get rid of H+ inside, keep internal pH at 7. Use Fe++
as electron donor to oxygen, combine with H+ to form water, get rid
of outside cell. Iron functions as electron supplier to get rid of protons.
- Cells process an enormous amount of iron for very small yields of energy.
Fe+++ reacts with OH- ions to form insoluble precipitate,
Fe(OH)3, reddish yellow color.
- View acidic stream containing iron bacteria
Phototrophs
- Use energy from sunlight to get high energy electrons (attached to carriers
high on redox tower). Use CO2 and Calvin-Benson cycle to make all organic
molecules.
- Critical molecules: photon absorbers = bacteriochlorophylls. Several
different varieties. Light is trapped by a patch of pigments = "antenna field",
gets passed around to a "reaction center" where an electron is released from
Mg++ ion with high energy, passed to electron transport system --
from this point, can use electron transport systems to generate proton
gradients, make ATP.
- Problem: need to make not only ATP (available from proton gradient), but also
NADPH. How to obtain?
- Two solutions:
- use a reduced molecule with high redox potential like
hydrogen gas (H2) or hydrogen sulfide (H2S) to pass electrons to
NADP+. Light not needed for this.
- use a reduced molecule
with low redox potential like water to release electrons and H+
ions. Need lots of energy to drive this reaction, so need an extra step. Light
is needed for this.
Anaerobic
photosynthetic bacteria
- Three common groups:
- Purple bacteria Exs: Chromatium vinosum, Thiospirillum jenense
- Purple nonsulfur bacteria. Exs: Rhodospirillum rubrum, Rhodobacter sphaeroides
vannielii
- Green sulfur bacteria (many are actually brown) Exs: Chlorobium limicola, Prosthecochloris aestuarii,
- To see slides of these bacteria, visit Bacteriology 303 at U. Wisconsin, scroll down page to Figs. 6-8.
- See handout on "Anoxygenic Photosynthesis"
- View animated movie of anoxygenic photosynthesis (from Cornell University)
- Notes: in both groups, electrons released by light travel through electron
transport systems back to the original photosystem = cyclic electron
flow. Proton gradient is produced, ATP is made as protons flow back
through ATP synthase molecules. Specific carriers are different.
- To make NADPH, need reduced electron donor.
(1) in purple bacteria, can
use organic molecules (e.g. fumarate), or H2 for non-sulfur bacteria; or can
use H2S or H2 for purple sulfur bacteria. Sulfur accumulates inside cells when
H2S is used, hence the name.
(2) in green sulfur bacteria, can use H2S, or
H2. Sulfur accumulates outside cells.
Aerobic
photosynthetic bacteria = cyanobacteria
- includes both prokaryotes (cyanobacteria, formerly called blue-green bacteria) and eukaryotes (algae, green plants)
- View light micrograph of Anabaena x1000, a cyanobacterium. The longer, clearer cells are heterocysts, specialized cells that fix nitrogen.
- View light micrograph of Oscillatoria x1000, another filamentous cyanobacterium.
- View light micrograph of Nostoc x1000, yet another cyanobacterium.
- View animated movie of oxygenic photosynthesis (from Cornell University)
- Notes: Two photosystems are needed, not one as in anoxygenic photosynthesis.
Why?
- Source of NADPH = electrons removed from photosystem I ---> excited by
light to high redox potential, passed to ferredoxin, then directly to
NADP+ -----> NADPH
- But wait!!! Now photosystem I has + charge, can't supply any more electrons.
Can't have this, so replace electrons from another photosystem II (see handout
diagram), also energized by light. During this process, electrons flow through
ETS system and make a proton gradient ( ------> ATP by chemiosmotic
phosphorylation). But electrons aren't flowing back to same place they started
from --- this is non-cyclic electron flow. Path resembles a letter "Z", so often called "Z-scheme" photosynthesis
- Problem: we've "borrowed" electrons from system I to make NADPH, then
"borrowed" electrons from system II to repay system I. How to repay system
II?
- Solution: Split water: H2O (+ light energy) ------> 2e- +
2H+ + 1/2 O2 (waste gas)
- Note: this is extremely important evolutionary step, took place billions of
years ago. Freed phototrophs from need to wait for production of hydrogen,
hydrogen sulfide, etc. until they could grow --- now they could grow whenever
there was light and water. Early earth was totally anaerobic --- but once
oxygenic phototrophs evolved, oxygen gas began to appear in atmosphere. Now new
evolution possible: use of oxygen as electron acceptor, big boost in ATP
yields. Result: oxygen concentration stabilized at 20%, constantly produced by
phototrophs, consumed by respiration.
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