Influence of Oxygen on Development of Nitrate Respiration in Bacillus stearothermophilus

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A denitrifying mutant of Bacillus stearothermophilus NCA 2184, strain 2184-D, was used to explore the development of nitrate respiration in relation to oxygen respiration. Aerobically grown wild-type cultures could acquire the ability to use nitrate as a result of selection of nitrate-respiring mutants by the presence of nitrate and a reduced oxygen tension. Fluctuation analysis has revealed that the frequency of occurrence of the nitrate-respiring mutant is about 7.5 × 10−8 per bacterium per generation. Nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase appeared to be induced sequentially in strain 2184-D by the addition of nitrate. The formation of both of these enzymes was repressed by oxygen so that cells grown aerobically with nitrate possessed a low basal level of nitrate reducatase and exhibited no denitrification. The rate of synthesis of nitrate reductase increased quickly after addition of nitrate and removal of oxygen. It then declined to a lower steady-state level. Cells grown anaerobically with nitrate retained approximately 30 to 40% of the respiratory activity of aerobically grown cells. Aeration of anaerobically grown cells in the presence of amino acids increased the respiratory activity to normal aerobic levels. This aeration promoted rapid degradation of the existing nitrate reductase with or without the added amino acids.

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