Literature DB >> 27396696

Biogenic manganese oxides as reservoirs of organic carbon and proteins in terrestrial and marine environments.

E R Estes1,2, P F Andeer2,3, D Nordlund4, S D Wankel2, C M Hansel2.   

Abstract

Manganese (Mn) oxides participate in a range of interactions with organic carbon (OC) that can lead to either carbon degradation or preservation. Here, we examine the abundance and composition of OC associated with biogenic and environmental Mn oxides to elucidate the role of Mn oxides as a reservoir for carbon and their potential for selective partitioning of particular carbon species. Mn oxides precipitated in natural brackish waters and by Mn(II)-oxidizing marine bacteria and terrestrial fungi harbor considerable levels of organic carbon (4.1-17.0 mol OC per kg mineral) compared to ferromanganese cave deposits which contain 1-2 orders of magnitude lower OC. Spectroscopic analyses indicate that the chemical composition of Mn oxide-associated OC from microbial cultures is homogeneous with bacterial Mn oxides hosting primarily proteinaceous carbon and fungal Mn oxides containing both protein- and lipopolysaccharide-like carbon. The bacterial Mn oxide-hosted proteins are involved in both Mn(II) oxidation and metal binding by these bacterial species and could be involved in the mineral nucleation process as well. By comparison, the composition of OC associated with Mn oxides formed in natural settings (brackish waters and particularly in cave ferromanganese rock coatings) is more spatially and chemically heterogeneous. Cave Mn oxide-associated organic material is enriched in aliphatic C, which together with the lower carbon concentrations, points to more extensive microbial or mineral processing of carbon in this system relative to the other systems examined in this study, and as would be expected in oligotrophic cave environments. This study highlights Mn oxides as a reservoir for carbon in varied environments. The presence and in some cases dominance of proteinaceous carbon within the biogenic and natural Mn oxides may contribute to preferential preservation of proteins in sediments and dominance of protein-dependent metabolisms in the subsurface biosphere.
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27396696     DOI: 10.1111/gbi.12195

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Geobiology        ISSN: 1472-4669            Impact factor:   4.407


  7 in total

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2.  Manganese Oxide Biomineralization Provides Protection against Nitrite Toxicity in a Cell-Density-Dependent Manner.

Authors:  Christian Zerfaß; Joseph A Christie-Oleza; Orkun S Soyer
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2019-01-09       Impact factor: 4.792

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4.  Mineralogical and Genomic Constraints on the Origin of Microbial Mn Oxide Formation in Complexed Microbial Community at the Terrestrial Hot Spring.

Authors:  Yuya Tsukamoto; Takeshi Kakegawa
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-30

5.  Ecosystem-bedrock interaction changes nutrient compartmentalization during early oxidative weathering.

Authors:  Dragos G Zaharescu; Carmen I Burghelea; Katerina Dontsova; Jennifer K Presler; Edward A Hunt; Kenneth J Domanik; Mary K Amistadi; Shana Sandhaus; Elise N Munoz; Emily E Gaddis; Miranda Galey; María O Vaquera-Ibarra; Maria A Palacios-Menendez; Ricardo Castrejón-Martinez; Estefanía C Roldán-Nicolau; Kexin Li; Raina M Maier; Christopher T Reinhard; Jon Chorover
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-10-18       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Mn oxide formation by phototrophs: Spatial and temporal patterns, with evidence of an enzymatic superoxide-mediated pathway.

Authors:  Dominique L Chaput; Alexandré J Fowler; Onyou Seo; Kelly Duhn; Colleen M Hansel; Cara M Santelli
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-12-03       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  Genome analysis of Pseudomonas sp. OF001 and Rubrivivax sp. A210 suggests multicopper oxidases catalyze manganese oxidation required for cylindrospermopsin transformation.

Authors:  Erika Berenice Martínez-Ruiz; Myriel Cooper; Jimena Barrero-Canosa; Mindia A S Haryono; Irina Bessarab; Rohan B H Williams; Ulrich Szewzyk
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-06-22       Impact factor: 3.969

  7 in total

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