(Redirected from Lithotrophic)
A 'lithotroph' is an
organism which uses an
inorganic substrate (usually of mineral origin) to obtain reducing equivalents for use in biosynthesis (e.g. carbon dioxide fixation) or
energy conservation via aerobic or anaerobic respiration. Lithotrophs are exclusively microbes; macrofauna do not possess the capability to utilize inorganic compounds as energy sources. Macrofauna and Lithotrophs can form symbiotic relationships, in which case the Lithotrophs are called "prokaryotic symbionts". An example of this is chemolithotrophic bacteria in deep sea worms or plastids, which reduced former photolithotrophic cyanobacteria-like organisms, in plants. Lithotrophs belong either to the domain
Bacteria or
Archaea. The term "Lithotroph" is created from the terms 'lithos' (rock) and 'troph' (consumer). It literally is the "eaters of rock." Many lithoautotrophs are
extremophiles, but this is not universally so.
Lithotrophs consume
reduced compounds (rich in
electrons). In chemolithotrophs, the compounds - the 'electron donors' - are oxidised in the
cell, and the electrons are channeled into respiratory chains, ultimately producing
ATP. The electron acceptor can be
oxygen (in
aerobic bacteria), but a variety of other electron acceptors,
organic and inorganic, are also used by various
species. Photolithotrops obtain energy from light and therefore use inorganic electron donors only to fuel biosynthetic reactions (e. g. carbon dioxide fixation in lithoautotrophs).
Lithotrophs participate in many geological processes, such as the weathering of parent material (bedrock) to form soil, as well as
biogeochemical cycling of
sulfur,
nitrogen, and other
elements. They may be present in the deep terrestrial subsurface (they have been found well over a 3 km below the surface of the planet), in soils, and in
endolith communities. As they are responsible for the liberation of many crucial nutrients, and participate in the formation of soil, lithotrophs play a crucial role in the maintenance of life on Earth.
Lithotrophic microbial consortia are responsible for the phenomenon known as
acid mine drainage, whereby energy-rich pyrites and other reduced sulfur compounds present in mine tailing heaps and in exposed rock faces is metabolized to form sulfates, thereby forming potentially toxic sulfuric acid. Acid mine drainage drastically alters the acidity and chemistry of groundwater and streams, and may endanger plant and animal populations. Activities similar to acid mine drainage, but on a much lower scale, are also found in natural conditions such as the rocky beds of glaciers, in soil and talus, on stone monuments and buildings and in the deep subsurface.
Here are a few examples of lithotrophic pathways, all of which 'may' use oxygen as electron acceptor:
★
Iron bacteria oxidize ferrous iron (Fe
2+) into ferric iron (Fe
3+)
★
Nitrifying bacteria oxidize
ammonia into
nitrite or, alternatively, nitrite into
nitrate.
★
Sulfur bacteria oxidize
sulfide into
sulfur or, subsequently, sulfur into
sulfate. They also can grow on a number of other reduced sulfur compounds (e. g. thiosulfate, thionates, polysulfides, sulfite).
★
Hydrogen bacteria oxidize
hydrogen to
water.
★
Carboxydotrophic bacteria oxidise
carbon monoxide to
carbon dioxide.
In the following examples, compounds other than oxygen is used as electron acceptors:
★
Methanogens are Archaea capable of oxidising hydrogen at the cost of
carbon dioxide reduction to methane.
★
Thiobacillus denitrificans is one of many known
sulfur bacteria oxidizing reduced sulfur compounds with nitrate instead of oxygen.
★ The recently discovered
Anammox bacteria oxidise
ammonia with
nitrite as electron acceptor to produce nitrogen gas.
★
Phosphite bacteria oxidize
phosphite into
phosphate. They use sulfate as electron acceptor, and reduce it into sulfide.
Lithotrophic bacteria cannot use, of course, their inorganic energy source as a
carbon source for the synthesis of their cells, because the above-mentioned electron donors contain no carbon. They choose one of two options:
★ 'Lithoheterotrophs' do not have the possibility to fix
carbon dioxide and must consume additional organic compounds in order to break them apart and use their carbon. Only few bacteria are fully heterolithotrophic.
★ '
Lithoautotrophs' are able to use
carbon dioxide from the
air as carbon source, the same way
plants do.
★ '
Mixotrophs' will take up and utilise organic material to complement their carbon dioxide fixation source (mix between autotrophy and heterotrophy). Many lithotrophs are recognised as mxiotrophic in regard of their C-metabolism.
In addition to this division, lithotrophs differ in the initial energy source which initiates ATP production:
★ 'Chemolithotrophs' use the above-mentioned inorganic compounds for aerobic or anaerobic respiration. The energy produced by the oxidation of these compounds is enough for ATP production. Some of electrons derived from the inorganic donors also need to be chanelled into biosynthesis. Mostly, additional energy has to be invested to transform these reducing equivalents to the forms and redox potentials needed (mostly NADH or NADPH), which occurs by
reverse electron transfer reactions.
★ 'Photolithotrophs' use
light as energy source. These bacteria are
photosynthetic; photolithotrophic bacteria are found in the
purple bacteria (e. g.
Chromatiaceae),
green bacteria (
Chlorobiaceae and
Chloroflexaceae) and
Cyanobacteria. The electrons obtained from the electron donors (purple and green bacteria oxidize sulfide, sulfur, sulfite, iron or hydrogen; Cyanobacteria extract reducing equivalents from water, i. e. oxidise water to oxygen) are not used for ATP production (as long as there is light); they are used in biosynthetic reactions. Some photolithotrophs shift over to chemolithotropic metabolism in the dark.
The opposite of lithotroph is
organotroph - an organism which gets its energy from the break up of organic compounds.
See also
★
Endolith