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Products of denitrification by a marine bacterium as revealed by gas chromatography

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Abstract

Gas chromatography was used to analyse the gases released by growing cultures of the denitrifying marine bacterium Pseudomonas perjectomarinus. When nitrate was provided as final oxidant, CO2 was the first detectable gas released. Following the peak rate of release of CO2 at approximately 16 h, N2 liheration began and peaked at 30 h. When N2O was provided as terminal oxidant, CO2 and N2 release began within a few hours and the rate of liberation of both increased for 45 to 50 h before leveling. Cell-free extracts of bacteria from denitrifying cultures of P. perfectomarinus were incubated anaerobically with nitrate, malic acid and electron transfer cofactors provided, and the gases in the atmosphere above the reaction mixtures were analysed. NO was found to be present transiently, and N2O was discerned after prolonged incubation. The applicability of gas chromatography to analyses of marine ecosystems and the need for better means of sampling the atmosphere above enzymatic reaction mixtures were disoussed.

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Communicated by G. L. Voss, Miami

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Barbaree, J.M., Payne, W.J. Products of denitrification by a marine bacterium as revealed by gas chromatography. Marine Biol. 1, 136–139 (1967). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00386519

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00386519

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