Publication | Open Access
Sodium dependence of acetate formation by the acetogenic bacterium Acetobacterium woodii
141
Citations
25
References
1989
Year
Sodium PumpEngineeringMicrobial PhysiologyBioelectrochemical ReactorDelta PnaBiosynthesisBiological Carbon FixationBioenergeticsMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologySodium DependenceSodium GradientPhotosynthesisBiotransformationBiochemistryAcetate FormationMicrobiologyMetabolismMedicineCarbonyl Metabolism
Growth of Acetobacterium woodii on fructose was stimulated by Na+; this stimulation was paralleled by a shift of the acetate-fructose ratio from 2.1 to 2.7. Growth on H2-CO2 or on methanol plus CO2 was strictly dependent on the presence of sodium ions in the medium. Acetate formation from formaldehyde plus H2-CO by resting cells required Na+, but from methanol plus H2-CO did not. This is analogous to H2-CO2 reduction to methane by Methanosarcina barkeri, which involves a sodium pump (V. Müller, C. Winner, and G. Gottschalk, Eur. J. Biochem. 178:519-525, 1988). This suggests that the reduction of methylenetetrahydrofolate to methyltetrahydrofolate is the Na+-requiring reaction. A sodium gradient (Na+ out/Na+ in = 32, delta pNa = -91 mV) was built up when resting cells of A. woodii were incubated under H2-CO2. Acetogenesis was inhibited when the delta pNa was dissipated by monensin.
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