Respiration and physiological state in marine bacteria
โ Scribed by J. P. Christensen; T. G. Owens; A. H. Devol; T. T. Packard
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 887 KB
- Volume
- 55
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-3162
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โฆ Synopsis
The relationship between oxygen consumption (R) and respiratory electron-transportsystem (ETS) activity was investigated in batch cultures of 5 species of marine bacteria, ~brio adaptatus, V. anguillarum, a partially identified Vibrio sp., SA774, Serratia marinorubra, and Pseudomonas perfectomarinus. Although cellular levels of R and ETS varied widely among the species tested, the R:ETS ratios for growing or senescent populations were relatively constant among the species; these ratios were 5.02 in growth and 0.426 in senescence, with coefficients of variation of 29 and 20%, respectively. The lower senescent-phase R:ETS ratio was due to a depression of the respiration rates following growth termination. The regression log (R per cell) = 0.832 log (ETS per cell) + 0.727 for the growing populations was similar to that determined for marine zooplankton. The slight dependency of the R:ETS ratio on organism dry weight found for zooplankton was supported by our data. Planktonic respiration rates estimated from measured ETS-depth profiles in the eastern tropical North Pacific Ocean using the senescent-phase R:ETS ratio were similar to published oxygen consumption rates in the deep sea.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Arsenic metabolism was studied for two marine microorganisms, a facultative anaerobic bacterium, Serratia marinorubra, and an obligately aerobic yeast, Rhodotorula rubra. Both were cultivated in media with (74As) arsenate (As V), and the products of arsenate metabolism were determined qualitatively.
## Abstract Aerobic mitochondria serve as the power sources of eukaryotes by producing ATP through oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). The enzymes involved in OXPHOS are multisubunit complexes encoded by both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. Thus, regulation of respiration is necessarily a highly coo