1 / 5

Chemotrophs & Phototrophs

Chemotrophs & Phototrophs. Chemoorganotrophs: reduced inorganic electron donor for energy and electrons. Chemolithotrophs: reduced inorganic electron donor for energy and electrons. Phototrophs: use light energy and an electron donor molecule (H 2 O, H 2 S, organic).

tinaj
Download Presentation

Chemotrophs & Phototrophs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chemotrophs & Phototrophs • Chemoorganotrophs: reduced inorganic electron donor for energy and electrons. • Chemolithotrophs: reduced inorganic electron donor for energy and electrons. • Phototrophs: use light energy and an electron donor molecule (H2O, H2S, organic). • Both may be autotrophs: fix CO2 into organic carbon via the Calvin Cycle.

  2. Chemolithotrophs • Electron donor molecule often unique to species. • Electron acceptor is usually O2. • Most are autotrophs using the Calvin Cycle to fix CO2. • Some can also grow heterotrophically. • Energy yield from electron donors varies, yet is always lower than that for a glucose molecule.

  3. Chemolithotrophs • ΔGo’ = -686 kcal/mol glucose to CO2. • In most cases, electrons from the donors can enter ETC directly and yield ATP by oxidative phosphorylation. • P/O Ratios are ≤ 1 for most (H2 the exception). • Huge amounts of inorganics are oxidized for growth, which can make a major impact on ecosystems.

  4. Chemolithotrophs • Hydrogen Oxidizers: • Most efficient (P/O > 1); E’o H2 < E’o NADH • Hydrogenase may donate electrons to NAD+ • Sulfur Oxidizers: • ATP by SLP in addition to oxidative phosphorylation • SLP is via adenosine 5’-phosphosulfate (APS) • Iron Oxidizers • Acidophilic Thiobacillus ferrooxidans Fe+2→ Fe+3 • Acid Mine Drainage if pyrite is exposed to O2 and H2O! • Circumneutral Gallionella ferruginea Fe+2→ Fe+3 • Nitrifying Bacteria: • Ammonium Oxidizers (NH4+→ NO2-) • Nitrate Oxidizers (NO2- → NO3-) • Process of “Nitrification” (NH4+→ NO3-)

  5. Chemolithotrophs • Most can’t directly reduce NAD+ to NADH (only H2 oxidizers). • NADH is needed to convert to NADPH for anabolic reactions. • ETC must reverse electron flow from donors with more positive E’o than NADH; an energy source is needed for this “up-hill” reverse e- transfer. • PMF is used for reversed electron flow, instead of making ATP.

More Related