Lithotroph


Lithotrophs are a diverse group of organisms using an inorganic substrate to obtain reducing equivalents for use in biosynthesis or energy conservation via aerobic or anaerobic respiration. While lithotrophs in the broader sense include photolithotrophs like plants, chemolithotrophs are exclusively microorganisms; no known macrofauna possesses the ability to use inorganic compounds as electron 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 giant tube worms or plastids, which are organelles within plant cells that may have evolved from photolithotrophic cyanobacteria-like organisms. Chemolithotrophs belong to the domains Bacteria and Archaea. The term "lithotroph" was created from the Greek terms 'lithos' and 'troph', meaning "eaters of rock". Many but not all lithoautotrophs are extremophiles.
Different from a lithotroph is an organotroph, an organism which obtains its reducing agents from the catabolism of organic compounds.

History

The term was suggested in 1946 by Lwoff and collaborators.

Biochemistry

Lithotrophs consume reduced inorganic compounds.

Chemolithotrophs

A chemolithotroph is able to use inorganic reduced compounds as electron sources. This process is accomplished through oxidation and ATP synthesis. The majority of chemolithotrophs are able to fix carbon dioxide through the Calvin cycle, a metabolic pathway in which carbon enters as CO2 and leaves as glucose. This group of organisms includes sulfur oxidizers, nitrifying bacteria, iron oxidizers, and hydrogen oxidizers.
The term "chemolithotrophy" refers to a cell’s acquisition of energy from the oxidation of inorganic compounds, also known as electron donors. This form of metabolism is believed to occur only in prokaryotes and was first characterized by microbiologist Sergei Winogradsky.

Habitat of chemolithotrophs

The survival of these bacteria is dependent on the physiochemical conditions of their environment. Although they are sensitive to certain factors such as quality of inorganic substrate, they are able to thrive under some of the most inhospitable conditions in the world, such as temperatures above 110 degrees Celsius and below 2 pH. The most important requirement for chemolithotropic life is an abundant source of inorganic compounds, which provide a suitable electron donor with relatively weak bonds or the ability to unlock the chemical energy of O2 in order to fix CO2 and produce the energy the microorganism needs to survive. Since chemosynthesis can take place in the absence of sunlight, these organisms are found mostly around hydrothermal vents and other locations rich in inorganic substrate.
The energy obtained from inorganic oxidation varies depending on the substrate and the reaction. For example, the oxidation of hydrogen sulfide to elemental sulfur produces far less energy than the oxidation of elemental sulfur to sulfate. The majority of lithotrophs fix carbon dioxide through the Calvin cycle, an energetically expensive process. For some substrates, such as ferrous iron, the cells must cull through large amounts of inorganic substrate to secure just a small amount of energy. This makes their metabolic process inefficient in many places and hinders them from thriving.

Overview of the metabolic process

There is a fairly large variation in the types of inorganic substrates that these microorganisms can use to produce energy. Sulfur is one of many inorganic substrates that can be utilized in different reduced forms depending on the specific biochemical process that a lithotroph uses. The chemolithotrophs that are best documented are aerobic respirers, meaning that they use oxygen in their metabolic process. The relatively weak, high-energy double bond of O2 makes it ideal for use as a high-energy Terminal Electron Acceptor. The list of these microorganisms that employ anaerobic respiration though is growing. At the heart of this metabolic process is an electron transport system that is similar to that of chemoorganotrophs. The major difference between these two microorganisms is that chemolithotrophs directly provide electrons to the electron transport chain, while chemoorganotrophs must generate their own cellular reducing power by oxidizing reduced organic compounds. Chemolithotrophs bypass this by obtaining their reducing power directly from the inorganic substrate or by the reverse electron transport reaction. Certain specialized chemolithotrophic bacteria utilize different derivatives of the Sox system; a central pathway specific to sulfur oxidation. This ancient and unique pathway illustrates the power that chemolithotrophs have evolved to utilize from inorganic substrates, such as sulfur.
In chemolithotrophs, the compounds - the electron donors - are oxidized in the cell, and the electrons are channeled into respiratory chains, ultimately producing ATP. The electron acceptor can be oxygen, but a variety of other electron acceptors, organic and inorganic, are also used by various species. Aerobic bacteria such as the nitrifying bacteria, Nitrobacter, utilize oxygen to oxidize nitrite to nitrate. Some lithotrophs produce organic compounds from carbon dioxide in a process called chemosynthesis, much as plants do in photosynthesis. Plants use energy from sunlight to drive carbon dioxide fixation, since both water and carbon dioxide are low in energy. By contrast, the hydrogen compounds used in chemosynthesis are higher in energy, so chemosynthesis can take place in the absence of sunlight. Ecosystems establish in and around hydrothermal vents as the abundance of inorganic substances, namely hydrogen, are constantly being supplied via magma in pockets below the sea floor. Other lithotrophs are able to directly utilize inorganic substances, e.g., iron, hydrogen sulfide, elemental sulfur, or thiosulfate, for some or all of their electron needs.
Here are a few examples of chemolithotrophic pathways, any of which may use oxygen, sulfur or other molecules as electron acceptors:
NameExamplesSource of electronsRespiration electron acceptor
Iron bacteriaAcidithiobacillus ferrooxidansFe2+Fe3+ + eO + 4H+ + 4e→ 2HO
Nitrosifying bacteriaNitrosomonasNH3 + 2HO →
NO + 7H+ + 6e
O + 4H+ + 4e → 2HO
Nitrifying bacteriaNitrobacterNO + HO → NO + 2H+ + 2eO + 4H+ + 4e → 2HO
Chemotrophic purple sulfur bacteriaHalothiobacillaceaeSS + 2eO + 4H+ + 4e→ 2HO
Sulfur-oxidizing bacteriaChemotrophic Rhodobacteraceae
and Thiotrichaceae
S + 4HO → SO + 8H+ + 6eO + 4H+ + 4e→ 2HO
Aerobic hydrogen bacteriaCupriavidus metalliduransH2 → 2H+ + 2eO + 4H+ + 4e→ 2HO
Anammox bacteriaPlanctomycetesNH
→ 1/2N2 + 4H+ + 3e
NO + 4H+ + 3e
1/2N2 + 2HO
Thiobacillus denitrificansThiobacillus denitrificansS + 4HO → SO + 8H+ + 6eNO + 6H+ + 5e
1/2N2 + 3HO
Sulfate-reducing bacteria: Hydrogen bacteriaDesulfovibrio paquesiiH2 → 2H+ + 2eSO + 8H+ + 6eS + 4HO
Sulfate-reducing bacteria: Phosphite bacteriaDesulfotignum phosphitoxidansPO + HO →
PO + 2H+ + 2e
SO + 8H+ + 6e
S + 4HO
MethanogensArchaeaH2 → 2H+ + 2eCO2 + 8H+ + 8eCH4 + 2HO
Carboxydotrophic bacteriaCarboxydothermus hydrogenoformansCO + HO → CO2 + 2H+ + 2e2H+ + 2eH

Photolithotrophs

Photolithotrophs such as plants obtain energy from light and therefore use inorganic electron donors such as water only to fuel biosynthetic reactions.

Lithoheterotrophs versus lithoautotrophs

Lithotrophic bacteria cannot use, of course, their inorganic energy source as a carbon source for the synthesis of their cells. They choose one of three options:
In addition to this division, lithotrophs differ in the initial energy source which initiates ATP production:
Lithotrophs participate in many geological processes, such as the formation of soil and the biogeochemical cycling of carbon, nitrogen, and other elements. Lithotrophs also associate with the modern-day issue of acid mine drainage. Lithotrophs may be present in a variety of environments, including deep terrestrial subsurfaces, soils, mines, and in endolith communities.

Soil formation

A primary example of lithotrophs that contribute to soil formation is Cyanobacteria. This group of bacteria are nitrogen-fixing photolithotrophs that are capable of using energy from sunlight and inorganic nutrients from rocks as reductants. This capability allows for their growth and development on native, oligotrophic rocks and aids in the subsequent deposition of their organic matter for other organisms to colonize. Colonization can initiate the process of organic compound decomposition: a primary factor for soil genesis. Such a mechanism has been attributed as part of the early evolutionary processes that helped shape the biological Earth.

Biogeochemical cycling

of elements is an essential component of lithotrophs within microbial environments. For example, in the carbon cycle, there are certain bacteria classified as photolithoautotrophs that generate organic carbon from atmospheric carbon dioxide. Certain chemolithoautotrophic bacteria can also produce organic carbon, some even in the absence of light. Similar to plants, these microbes provide a usable form of energy for organisms to consume. On the contrary, there are lithotrophs that have the ability to ferment, implying their ability to convert organic carbon into another usable form. Lithotrophs play an important role in the biological aspect of the iron cycle. These organisms can use iron as either an electron donor, Fe --> Fe, or as an electron acceptor, Fe --> Fe. Another example is the cycling of nitrogen. Many lithotrophic bacteria play a role in reducing inorganic nitrogen to organic nitrogen in a process called nitrogen fixation. Likewise, there are many lithotrophic bacteria that also convert ammonium into nitrogen gas in a process called denitrification. Carbon and nitrogen are important nutrients, essential for metabolic processes, and can sometimes be the limiting factor that affects organismal growth and development. Thus, lithotrophs are key players in both providing and removing these important resource.

Acid mine drainage

Lithotrophic microbes are responsible for the phenomenon known as acid mine drainage. Typically occurring in mining areas, this process concerns the active metabolism of energy-rich pyrites and other reduced sulfur components to sulfate. One example is the acidophilic bacterial genus, A. ferrooxidans, that utilize iron sulfide and oxygen to generate sulfuric acid. The acidic product of these specific lithotrophs has the potential to drain from the mining area via water run-off and enter the environment.
Acid mine drainage drastically alters the acidity and chemistry of groundwater and streams, and may endanger plant and animal populations downstream of mining areas. 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.

Astrobiology

It has been suggested that biominerals could be important indicators of extraterrestrial life and thus could play an important role in the search for past or present life on the planet Mars. Furthermore, organic components that are often associated with biominerals are believed to play crucial roles in both pre-biotic and biotic reactions.
On January 24, 2014, NASA reported that current studies by the Curiosity and Opportunity rovers on Mars will now be searching for evidence of ancient life, including a biosphere based on autotrophic, chemotrophic and/or chemolithoautotrophic microorganisms, as well as ancient water, including fluvio-lacustrine environments that may have been habitable. The search for evidence of habitability, taphonomy, and organic carbon on the planet Mars is now a primary NASA objective.