thiourea and nitrapyrin

thiourea has been researched along with nitrapyrin* in 4 studies

Other Studies

4 other study(ies) available for thiourea and nitrapyrin

ArticleYear
Responses of the terrestrial ammonia-oxidizing archaeon Ca. Nitrososphaera viennensis and the ammonia-oxidizing bacterium Nitrosospira multiformis to nitrification inhibitors.
    FEMS microbiology letters, 2013, Volume: 344, Issue:2

    Nitrification inhibitors have been used for decades to improve nitrogen fertilizer utilization in farmland. However, their effect on ammonia-oxidizing Archaea (AOA) in soil is little explored. Here, we compared the impact of diverse inhibitors on nitrification activity of the soil archaeon Ca. Nitrososphaera viennensis EN76 and compared it to that of the ammonia-oxidizing bacterium (AOB) Nitrosospira multiformis. Allylthiourea, amidinothiourea, and dicyandiamide (DCD) inhibited ammonia oxidation in cultures of both N. multiformis and N. viennensis, but the effect on N. viennensis was markedly lower. In particular, the effective concentration 50 (EC50) of allylthiourea was 1000 times higher for the AOA culture. Among the tested nitrification inhibitors, DCD was the least potent against N. viennensis. Nitrapyrin had at the maximal soluble concentration only a very weak inhibitory effect on the AOB N. multiformis, but showed a moderate effect on the AOA. The antibiotic sulfathiazole inhibited the bacterium, but barely affected the archaeon. Only the NO-scavenger carboxy-PTIO had a strong inhibitory effect on the archaeon, but had little effect on the bacterium in the concentrations tested. Our results reflect the fundamental metabolic and cellular differences of AOA and AOB and will be useful for future applications of inhibitors aimed at distinguishing activities of AOA and AOB in soil environments.

    Topics: Ammonia; Archaea; Benzoates; Fertilizers; Guanidines; Imidazoles; Nitrification; Nitrosomonadaceae; Oxidation-Reduction; Picolines; Sulfathiazole; Sulfathiazoles; Thiourea

2013
Construction of a highly bioluminescent Nitrosomonas as a probe for nitrification conditions.
    Archives of microbiology, 1999, Volume: 172, Issue:1

    Cloned luciferase-encoding operons were transferred by conjugation to a natural isolate of the ammonia-oxidizing bacterial strain Nitrosomonas sp. RST41-3, thereby establishing conjugation as a tool for gene transfer into Nitrosomonas strains. Luminescence was dependent on the pH of the medium and the concentration of the substrate ammonium chloride. Moreover, the luminescence of the transconjugants was reduced immediately by micromolar concentrations of nitrapyrin and allylthiourea, which are specific inhibitors of nitrification. Our results indicate that luminescent Nitrosomonas strains may be useful as a probe to detect nitrification conditions in the natural environment as well as in sewage plants.

    Topics: Ammonium Chloride; Biodegradation, Environmental; Culture Media; Gene Transfer Techniques; Genes, Bacterial; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Luciferases; Luminescent Measurements; Nitrites; Nitrosomonas; Picolines; Thiourea; Transfection

1999
A bioluminescence assay using Nitrosomonas europaea for rapid and sensitive detection of nitrification inhibitors.
    Applied and environmental microbiology, 1998, Volume: 64, Issue:10

    An expression vector for the luxAB genes, derived from Vibrio harveyi, was introduced into Nitrosomonas europaea. Although the recombinant strain produced bioluminescence due to the expression of the luxAB genes under normal growing conditions, the intensity of the light emission decreased immediately, in a time-and dose-dependent manner, with the addition of ammonia monooxygenase inhibitors, such as allylthiourea, phenol, and nitrapyrin. When whole cells were challenged with several nitrification inhibitors and toxic compounds, a close relationship was found between the change in the intensity of the light emission and the level of ammonia-oxidizing activity. The response of bioluminescence to the addition of allylthiourea was considerably faster than the change in the ammonia-oxidizing rate, measured as both the O2 uptake and NO2- production rates. The bioluminescence of cells inactivated by ammonia monooxygenase inhibitor was recovered rapidly by the addition of certain substrates for hydroxylamine oxidoreductase. These results suggested that the inhibition of bioluminescence was caused by the immediate decrease of reducing power in the cell due to the inactivation of ammonia monooxygenase, as well as by the destruction of other cellular metabolic pathways. We conclude that the assay system using luminous Nitrosomonas can be applied as a rapid and sensitive detection test for nitrification inhibitors, and it will be used to monitor the nitrification process in wastewater treatment plants.

    Topics: Enzyme Inhibitors; Genes, Bacterial; Kinetics; Luciferases; Luminescence; Nitrites; Nitrosomonas; Oxidoreductases; Oxygen Consumption; Phenol; Picolines; Plasmids; Restriction Mapping; Thiourea; Transformation, Bacterial; Vibrio

1998
The effect of thiosulphate and other inhibitors of autotrophic nitrification on heterotrophic nitrifiers.
    Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 1989, Volume: 56, Issue:4

    It has been found that heterotrophic nitrification by Thiosphaera pantotropha can be inhibited by thiosulphate in batch and chemostat cultures. Allythiourea and nitrapyrin, both classically considered to be specific inhibitors of autotrophic nitrification, inhibited nitrification by Tsa. pantotropha in short-term experiments with resting cell suspensions. Hydroxylamine inhibited ammonia oxidation in chemostat cultures, but was itself fully oxidized. Thus the total nitrification rate for the culture remained the same. Heterotrophic nitrification by another organism, a strain of "Pseudomonas denitrificans" has also been shown to be inhibited by thiosulphate in short term experiments and in the chemostat. During these experiments it became evident that this strain is able to grow mixotrophically (with acetate) and autotrophically in a chemostat with thiosulphate as the energy source.

    Topics: Acetates; Ammonia; Culture Media; Hydroxylamines; Nitrogen; Oxygen; Picolines; Pseudomonas; Thiobacillus; Thiosulfates; Thiourea

1989