Community Composition of  Nitrite Reductase Gene Sequences in an Acid Mine Drainage Environment.

This study examined denitrifying microbes within sediments impacted by acidic and metal-rich AMD or ARD in the Iron Springs Mining District (10 sites across four regions over four time points) located in Southwest Colorado, USA. Denitrification functional gene sequences (nirS and nirK coding for nitrite reductase) had a high number of observed OTUs (260 for nirS and 253 for nirK) and were observed at sites with pH as low as 3.5 and metals > 2 mg/L (including aluminum, iron, manganese, strontium, and zinc). A majority of the nirK and nirS OTUs (> 60%) were present in only one sampling region. Approximately 8% of the nirK and nirS OTUs had a more cosmopolitan distribution with presence in three or more regions. Phylogenetically related OTUs were found across sites with very different chemistry. The overall community structure for nirK and nirS genes was correlated to conductivity and calcium (respectively), which may suggest that conductivity may play an important role in shaping the distribution of nirK- and nirS-type denitrifiers. Overall, these findings improve upon our understanding of the potential for denitrification within an ecosystem impacted by AMD or ARD and provide a foundation for future research to understand the rates and physiology of denitrifying organisms in these systems. PMID: 31446448 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Microbial Ecology - Category: Microbiology Authors: Tags: Microb Ecol Source Type: research