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. 2002 Feb;36(3):774-8.
doi: 10.1016/s0043-1354(01)00272-x.

Luxury uptake of phosphorus by sediment bacteria

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Luxury uptake of phosphorus by sediment bacteria

Aazam Khoshmanesh et al. Water Res. 2002 Feb.

Abstract

This note reports the results of experiments aimed at confirming the luxury uptake of phosphorus (P) by sediment bacteria as polyphosphate (Poly-P). Aerobic suspensions of sediments from two different sites were spiked with 1 mg P/L as orthophosphate and augmented with acetate (a fermentation product) or glucose. The orthophosphate was rapidly taken up over a period of a few hours. When these aerobic uptake experiments were made anaerobic and additional organic carbon added, only the acetate-amended sediment released a significant amount of the added phosphorus. It was hypothesised that during the aerobic stage, and with the addition of acetate, some of the phosphorus was accumulated as Poly-P by sediment microorganisms, which was released during the subsequent anaerobic stage (provided acetate was still present). Two lines of evidence--transmission electron microscope analysis of sediment bacteria and 31P-NMR analysis of sediment extracts--are presented to support the hypothesis that a portion of the phosphorus taken up during the aerobic experiments was stored as Poly-P.

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