Mineral-Bound Trace
Metals as Cofactors for Anaerobic
Biological Nitrogen Fixation
Posted on 2023-04-28 - 19:44
Nitrogenase is the only known biological enzyme capable
of reducing
N2 to bioavailable NH3. Most nitrogenases use
Mo as a metallocofactor, while alternative cofactors V and Fe are
also viable. Both geological and bioinformatic evidence suggest an
ancient origin of Mo-based nitrogenase in the Archean, despite the
low concentration of dissolved Mo in the Archean oceans. This apparent
paradox would be resolvable if mineral-bound Mo were bioavailable
for nitrogen fixation by ancient diazotrophs. In this study, the bioavailability
of mineral-bound Mo, V, and Fe was determined by incubating an obligately
anaerobic diazotroph Clostridium kluyveri with Mo-, V-, and Fe-bearing minerals (molybdenite, cavansite, and
ferrihydrite, respectively) and basalt under diazotrophic conditions.
The results showed that C. kluyveri utilized mineral-associated metals to express nitrogenase genes
and fix nitrogen, as measured by the reverse transcription quantitative
polymerase chain reaction and acetylene reduction assay, respectively. C. kluyveri secreted chelating molecules to extract
metals from the minerals. As a result of microbial weathering, mineral
surface chemistry significantly changed, likely due to surface coating
by microbial exudates for metal extraction. These results provide
important support for the ancient origin of Mo-based nitrogenase,
with profound implications for coevolution of the biosphere and geosphere.