Archaeal nitrification in the ocean
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research · Radboud University Nijmegen · +1 more institution
Abstract
Marine Crenarchaeota are the most abundant single group of prokaryotes in the ocean, but their physiology and role in marine biogeochemical cycles are unknown. Recently, a member of this clade was isolated from a sea aquarium and shown to be capable of nitrification, tentatively suggesting that Crenarchaeota may play a role in the oceanic nitrogen cycle. We enriched a crenarchaeote from North Sea water and showed that its abundance, and not that of bacteria, correlates with ammonium oxidation to nitrite. A time series study in the North Sea revealed that the abundance of the gene encoding for the archaeal ammonia monooxygenase alfa subunit (amoA) is correlated with a decline in ammonium concentrations and with…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 56.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
12- CWCornelia WuchterCorresponding
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
- BABen Abbas
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
- MJMarco J. L. Coolen
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
- LHLydie Herfort
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
- JVJudith van Bleijswijk
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
Topics & keywords
- Crenarchaeota
- Ammonia monooxygenase
- Nitrification
- Archaea
- Ammonium
- Biology
- Biogeochemical cycle
- Nitrogen cycle
- Life below water