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==Introduction ==
{{Curated}}
[[Image:Ncycl.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Image of N cycle [http://www.visionlearning.com/library/modules/mid98/Image/VLObject-2068-030815020825.jpg Reference to Source of Image]]]
[[Image:Intro1.jpg|thumb|500px|right|Image of N cycle [https://i1.wp.com/ucce.ucdavis.edu/files/repository/calag/fig6701p71.jpg?zoom=2 Image Source]]]
The nitrogen cycle is an important chemical cycle which occurs in the ecosystem.  The nitrogen cycle begins when atmospheric N<sub>2</sub> is transformed by organisms to NH<sub>4</sub>. This process is known as mineralization, when organic nitrogen is transformed into inorganic nitrogen. This NH<sub>4</sub> is than converted into nitrite which is later converted into nitrate, and the process further repeats itself. This process is known as nitrfication, and is carried out mainly my nitrifying bacteria such as nitrococcus, and nitrobacter. Nitrification occurs when the environment is aerobic. When the environment is anaerobic the nitrate undergoes denitrification which can have severe consequences with regards to the atmophere. Denitrification is when nitrate gets converted into atmospheric nitrogen which is a greenhouse gas.  Immobilization is another step in this cycle and is the conversion of nitrate to organic nitrogen. The nitrogen cycle is important because it results in important compounds being produced which are essential for proper growth of plants and other organisms.
 
[[Image:Ncycle.gif|thumb|500px|right|Animation of N cycle [https://s10.lite.msu.edu/res/msu/botonl/b_online/library/micro229/terry/229sp00/lectures/Ncycleanim.html Image Source]]]
Nitrogen is one of the most abundant elements on Earth - it makes up 78% of the atmosphere, 16% of all protein diets<ref>Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nation. 2003. Food Energy-Methods of Analysis and Conversion Factors. Rome. 2003. ISSN: 0254-4725. p. 7. URL: ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/006/y5022e/y5022e00.pdf</ref>, and is present at a concentration of 7.5 kilograms for every 250 kilograms of human feces<ref>Malkki, S. 1999. Human faeces as a resource in agriculture. : 36-43. URL: http://orgprints.org/8477/</ref>.
 
The different forms of nitrogen undergo various chemical and physical transformations that are all equally critical to the global nitrogen cycle. Over the last few decades, excessive fertilizer and fossil fuel usage have lead to serious environmental problems, which have increased disease and pollution. Some of these issues include nitrate-contaminated groundwater, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutrophication eutrophication], and increased production of carbon dioxide, methane, and other harmful greenhouse gases in the [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Carbon_cycle carbon cycle]<ref name="three">Galloway, J. N., Townsend, A. R., Erisman, J. W., Bekunda, M., Cai, Z., Freney, J. R., ... & Sutton, M. A. (2008). Transformation of the nitrogen cycle: recent trends, questions, and potential solutions. Science, 320(5878), 889-892. URL: http://science.sciencemag.org/content/320/5878/889</ref>.
 
Accordingly, researchers have focused on balancing the cost to the benefits of human activities. As part of the global nitrogen cycle, soil is heavily studied not only because a significant amount of nitrogen is stored in the soil<ref name="three" />, but also because the increasing human population demands more nitrogen for food production.
 
In soil, most of the chemical transformations of nitrogen are due to microbial activities, such as nitrogen fixation, nitrification, immobilization, and denitrification. Learning how organisms behave in soil is critical for humans to understand the complex nitrogen cycle.


==Nitrogen cycle processes==
==Nitrogen cycle processes==
[[Image:simplencycle.gif|thumb|300px|left| N cycle showing aerobic and anaerobic processes [http://www.irucks.com/images/simplifiedNcycle.gif Reference from source image]]]
[[Image:snc.png|thumb|300px|left|Soil Nitrogen Cycle [https://www.agric.wa.gov.au/soil-carbon/immobilisation-soil-nitrogen-heavy-stubble-loads Image Source]]]
Nitrogen is an essential nutrient for all life on earth. It is present in various forms such as dinitrogen gas, organic nitrogen, and ammonium and nitrate ions. Microbially mediated processes transform nitrogen form one form to another. These transformations include nitrogen fixation (transformation of dinitrogen to ammonia), ammonification/ mineralization (conversion of organic nitrogen to ammonium), nitrification (conversion of ammonium to nitrate; occurs in aerobic conditions), immobilization (assimilation), and denitrification (reduction of nitrate to gaseous oxide and dinitrogen; occurs in anaerobic conditions)
===Natural Soil Nitrogen Cycle===
Dinitrogen is an essential element for the nitrogen cycle. The symbiotic microbes fix the dinitrogen (N<sub>2</sub>) into volatile ammonia, NH<sub>3</sub>, by the process of nitrogen fixation. The ammonia is further protonated to ammonium, NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>, which is uptaken by plants to manufacture amino acids for growth. When plants decompose, the organic molecules present in the plant residues become a source of nitrogen and other nutrients to soil microbes. The microbes conduct mineralization (ammonification) to utilize the organic molecules as electron donors, acquiring energy and producing ammonium. In contrast, the transformation of organic nitrogen to ammonium is reversible through immobilization (assimilation) when the carbon to nitrogen ratio (C/N ratio) is high<ref name="four">USDA NRCS East National Technology Support Center, & North Dakota NRCS. (2011, January). Carbon to Nitrogen Ratios in Cropping Systems (United States, United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service). Retrieved March 11, 2016, from soils.usda.gov/sqi</ref>. Ammonium can also undergo nitrification to produce NO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> in an aerobic environments. The NO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> can be utilized by plants or by other organisms in anaerobic environments as an electron acceptor, can leach out by dissolving in water, or be reduced to dinitrogen gas via denitrification processes in anaerobic conditions. During the denitrification and nitrification processes nitrous oxide, N<sub>2</sub>O, is produced and escapes into atmosphere.
 
===Anthropogenic Influences on the Soil Nitrogen Cycle===
One major influence of human input is reduced biological nitrogen fixation. With excessive ammonium input, plants no longer need the symbiotic microbes to provide ammonium. As a result, the degree of symbiosis will be diminished. Furthermore, the excessive ammonium provides nutrients for nitrifiers to produce nitrate, causing an increase in the amount of leached nitrate.
Another negative outcome of anthropogenic inputs is the increased emission of nitrous oxide into the atmosphere due to increased nitrification and denitrification from excessive ammonium inputs<ref name="three" />.
 
==Nitrogen fixation==
[[Image:nfm.png|thumb|400px|right|Nitrogenase Pathway [https://www.boundless.com/microbiology/textbooks/boundless-microbiology-textbook/microbial-metabolism-5/nitrogen-fixation-55/nitrogen-fixation-mechanism-354-5687/ Image Source]]]
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prokaryote Prokaryotes](bacteria) are responsible for the nitrogen fixation inside the soil. They mostly establish associative relationships with leguminous plants and other plant species<ref name="five">Graham, P. H., & Vance, C. P. (2000). Nitrogen fixation in perspective: an overview of research and extension needs. Field Crops Research, 65(2), 93-106. URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378429099000805</ref>. Yet, there are free-living bacteria like [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Azotobacter ''Azotobacter'']<ref name="six">Zehr, J. P., Jenkins, B. D., Short, S. M., & Steward, G. F. (2003). Nitrogenase gene diversity and microbial community structure: a cross‐system comparison. Environmental microbiology, 5(7), 539-554. URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1462-2920.2003.00451.x/full</ref>. All of the prokaryotes that are capable of nitrogen fixation have [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogenase nitrogenase], which can fix nitrogen into ammonia. Many prokaryotes share the same enzyme complex through horizontal gene transfer via plasmids or evolutionary events<ref name="six" />.
 
===Nitrogen Fixation Mechanism===
The overall reaction catalyzed by nitrogenase is  N<sub>2</sub> + 8H+ + 8e<sup>-</sup> + 16 ATP = 2NH<sub>3</sub> + H<sub>2</sub> + 16ADP + 16 Pi<ref name="seven">Hoffman, B. M., Lukoyanov, D., Yang, Z. Y., Dean, D. R., & Seefeldt, L. C. (2014). Mechanism of nitrogen fixation by nitrogenase: the next stage.Chemical reviews, 114(8), 4041-4062. URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/cr400641x</ref>. In the process, nitrogen is used to replace a pair of hydrogen molecules on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogenase nitrogenase] complex, which has been heavily reduced along with protonation. The rest of the H+ will bond to the nitrogen and reform the structure of the molecule. Then, H+ continues to be added to the complex and binds with an NH group to form NH<sub>3</sub>.
Each complex is able to produce two NH3 molecules in each cycle of this process<ref name="seven" />. Once NH<sub>3</sub> leaves the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogenase nitrogenase] complex, it will be rapidly protonated to NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>.
 
===Mechanisms of Creating Anaerobic Environment===
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogenase Nitrogenase] are inhibited by O<sub>2</sub><ref name="eight">The Microbial World, produced by Jim Deacon. Institute of Cell and Molecular Biology, The University of Edinburgh. Cited at 2016. URL:http://archive.bio.ed.ac.uk/jdeacon/microbes/nitrogen.htm</ref>, thus anaerobic environments are required for conducting nitrogen fixation. Free-living bacteria like [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Azotobacter ''Azotobacter''] have a couple of methods to overcome the aerobic condition.
[https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Azotobacter ''Azotobacter''] has a very high rate of respiratory metabolism so that it can keep the concentration of oxygen low within the cell in order to protect the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogenase nitrogenase] enzyme. The second method adapted by cultured [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Azotobacter ''Azotobacter''] and ''Rhizobium'' species is to excrete large amounts of extracellular polymers that reduce the diffusion of oxygen. Leghemoglobin is a molecule in legume modules that are used to trap oxygen via chemical mechanisms that are similar to those used in hemoglobin<ref name="eight" />.
Other microorganisms, such as the cyanobacteria ''Nostoc'', form special structures with thick cell walls that exclude oxygen and allow the cell to provide fixed nitrogen to its neighbors. Other cyanobacteria species have specific cells within their body that are only used for nitrogen fixation. In these cells, there is only photosystem I for ATP generation, whereas other cells have both photosystem I and II, which generate oxygen. Alternative [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogenase nitrogenase] that are not deactivated by oxygen do exist but are found in a relatively small number of organisms<ref name="eight" />.
 
===Key Microorganisms===
[[Image:nfko.png|thumb|290px|right|Lichen of Fungi and Algae [https://sites.google.com/site/weber4fungus/home/lichen Image Source]]]
The portion of nitrogen fixed by prokaryotes make up the vast majority of all biologically active nitrogen on the planet. Diazotrophs are a category of all organisms that are capable of fixing nitrogen<ref name="nine">Sylvia, D.M., Fuhrmann, J.J., Hartel, P.G.,& Zuberer, D.A. (2005). Principles and application of soil microbiology. 2nd edition.Pearson. New Jersey.</ref>. Diazotrophs either coexist with plants via symbiosis or have the ability to live freely inside the soil.  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azorhizobium ''Azorhizobium''], [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Bradyrhizobium ''Bradyrhizobium''], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhizobium ''Rhizobium''], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradyrhizobium ''Bradyrhizobium''], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinorhizobium ''Sinorhizobium''], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesorhizobium ''Mesorhizobium''], and [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24581678 ''Allorhizobium''] are genera that have symbiotic relationships with [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Legume-Rhizobium#Bradyrhizobium leguminous plants] <ref name="five" />. Diazotrophs modify leguminous root hairs into nodules to create an anaerobic environment and to provide an energy source in the form of organic carbon. In return, bacteria provide ammonium to the plant as a component for plant growth.
There are also other genera that have different relationships with plants. For instance, [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Frankia ''Frankia''] has actinorrhizal symbiosis with a tree genus known as ''Casuarina''<ref name="five" />. There are some genera, like [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Azotobacter ''Azotobacter''], that live freely in aerobic environments. and some, like [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Desulfovibrio ''Desulfovibrio''], that live freely in anaerobic environments<ref name="eight" />.
A more unique example of a symbiotic relationship is that of lichens. [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Cyanobacteria_and_Cyanotoxins Cyanobacteria], which is a photoautotrophic genus that fixes nitrogen, are protected by fungal hyphae. In return, the fungi receive a critical nutrient source in the form of ammonium <ref name="ten">Fun Facts About Fungi, hosted by the Utah State University Intermountain Herbarium. Utah State University. Cited at 2016. URL: http://herbarium.usu.edu/fungi/funfacts/lichens.htm</ref>.
 
==Nitrogen Ammonification==
Net nitrogen mineralization is commonly defined as the sum of concurrent ammonium production and consumption processes<ref name="nine" />. However, in recent years, it has been shown that mineralization also is driven by depolymerization of nitrogen containing polymers available to use both by plants and microorganisms<ref name="eleven">Schimel, J. P., & Bennett, J. (2004). Nitrogen mineralization: challenges of a changing paradigm. Ecology, 85(3), 591-602. URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1890/03-8002/abstract</ref>, and thus it is more correct to call the process ammonification or gross nitrogen mineralization.
 
The new paradigm regarding nitrogen cycling rethinks mineralization as the center point in the nitrogen cycle<ref name="eleven" />, and instead regards depolymerization of nitrogen containing polymers as what regulates the nitrogen cycle. Ammonification or gross nitrogen mineralization is the conversion of organic-nitrogen polymers to ammonium, mediated by heterotrophic microbes. The microbial degradation of amino acids, sugars, and nucleic acids is seen as a need for energy and carbon, with ammonium released as a byproduct of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catabolism catabolism]<ref name="nine" />. Since the polymers are not immediately bioavailable due to their large size, they are first cleaved by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exoenzyme extracellular enzymes]<ref name="eleven" />.
 
[[Image:AmmParadigm.JPG|thumb|600px|left| Change in Paradigm Concerning the Nitrogen Cycle]]<ref name="eleven" />
 
The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exoenzyme extracellular enzymes] are created by microorganisms, and have the capacity to depolymerize proteins, aminopolysaccharides found in cell walls, nucleic acids, and to hydrolyze urea<ref name="nine" />. Proteins are broken down by a wide variety of proteinases (large proteins), proteases, and peptidases that cleave dipeptides or split individual amino acids. Some examples of isolated proteolytic enzymes are subtilism, clostripain, and thermolysin<ref name="nine" />.
 
Several common extracellular polymers degrade cell wall polymers, producing an end product of individual amino sugar monomers<ref name="nine" />. In fungi which contain primarily chitin cell walls, chitinase degrades the cell walls into dimers, and then chitobiase breaks down each dimer into N-acetylglucosamine<ref name="nine" />. In bacteria containing peptidoglycan cell walls, several enzymes, the most predominant of which is lysozyme, breaks the beta linkages holding the polymer together<ref name="nine" />.
 
Nucleic acids are degraded by RNases and DNases, which hydrolyze ester ester bonds between phosphate and pentose sugars that make up the backbone of DNA and RNA, resulting in an end product of individual nucleotides<ref name="nine" />.


Ureases hydrolyze urea into carbon dioxide and ammonium, which plays a key role in immediate fertilization plant availability<ref name="nine" />. The cofactor of the urease enzyme is nickel<ref name="nine" />.


===Nitrogen fixation===
The research on extracellular enzymes and soil constituents has revealed some insight into the complexity of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_food_web#Community_matrix_models soil matrix]. An enzyme and substrate may bind to clay surfaces, protecting them from degradation and resulting in a slow degradation of the substrate over time<ref name="nine" />. In addition, an enzyme can remain active and act on an available substrate if its catalytic site is unaffected and structure unaltered by adsorption to the clay surface<ref name="nine" />.


Intracellular enzymes play a critical role in nitrogen transformations<ref name="nine" />. In most cases, the final product of ammonium occurs as a result of intracellular enzymes within microbial cells. There are two types of nitrogen found in amino acids: amine and amide. In the amide, the asparagine and glutamate are cleaved by aspariginase and glutaminase. In the amine, amino acid dehydrogenases and oxidases release the amino nitrogen in a process called deamination.


Atmospheric nitrogen (N<sub>2</sub>) is abundant, but unavailable for biological activity due to the high energy required to break the triple bond. In nitrogen fixation, atmospheric nitrogen is reduced to biologically useful ammonia (NH<sub>3</sub>) by the activity of prokaryotes utilizing nitrogenase.
Amino sugars are metabolized in two steps - kinase phosphorylation followed by deamination<ref name="nine" />. The degradation of nucleotides and subsequent ammonium release involves multiple steps - nucleotides are hydrolyzed to produce nucleosides and phosphate (PO<sub>4</sub><sup>3-</sup>), the nucleosides are then further hydrolyzed to purines and pyrimidine bases and pentose sugar molecule parts, and finally the ammonium is released during the catabolism of the purines and pyrimidines with a urea intermediate<ref name="nine" />.
====Chemistry====
The reaction catalyzed by nitrogenase is N<sub>2</sub> + 8H<sup>+</sup> + 8e<sup>-</sup> ---> 2NH<sub>3</sub> + H<sub>2</sub>. Ammonia produced in this way is rapidly protonated to NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup>. Nitrogenases are irreversibly inhibited by exposure to O<sub>2</sub>, and thus organisms must take steps to prevent this. Some organisms, such as [[azotobacter]] protect their nitrogenases with a thick capsule that slows oxygen diffusion. Others, such as the cyanobacteria [[nostoc]] form special cells with thick cell walls to exclude oxygen, allowing the cell to provide fixed nitrogen to its neighbors. Alternative nitrogenases do exist that are not deactivated by oxygen, but they are found in a relatively small number of organisms.


====Key microorganisms====
====Key microorganisms====
Nitrogen fixed by prokaryotes constitutes the vast majority of all biologically active nitrogen on the planet. Nitrogen-fixers may be aerobic or anaerobic, and may be free-living or in a symbiotic relationship with a plant.
The groups of microorganisms responsible for ammonification are very broad and cover a wide range of species.


===Nitrogen Mineralization===
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_nutritional_groups#Energy_and_carbon Organoheterotrophs] are an example of a group of microorganisms that mineralize nitrogen, often going after carbon in addition to the nitrogenous compounds present in the plant residue.
Nitrogen mineralization is the sum of concurrent ammonium production and consumption processes. It is sometimes used in a generic sense for the production of inorganic nitrogen, both ammonium and nitrate (Sylvia et al, 2005).  


Ammonification or gross nitrogen mineralization is the conversion of organic-nitrogen compounds to ammonium. This process is mediated by heterotrophic microbes. Production of ammonium involves several steps. First organic nitrogen is broken down by extracellular enzyme. Then the resulting products pass across cell membrane and are metabolized, resulting in ammonium production, which release into the soil solution.
==Nitrogen Immobilization==
Immobilization is the conversion of ammonium and nitrate to organic nitrogen, primarily as a result of the assimilation of ammonium by the microbial biomass.The process requires energy for the conversion of nitrate to ammonium and subsequent incorporation of ammonium into amino acids.
 
Microorganisms assimilate ammonium by two secondary pathways - the end result of both pathways is glutamate, which is then transferred to other carbon skeletons by transaminase reactions that form amino acids<ref name="nine" />.
 
The first pathway occurs under a high concentration of ammonium (about 0.5 milligrams of nitrogen per kilogram of soil), in which NADPH<sub>2</sub> coenzymes adds ammonium to alpha ketoglutarate in order to form glutamate<ref name="nine" />.
 
The second pathway occurs in lower concentrations of ammonium and uses a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glutamine_oxoglutarate_aminotransferase glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthetase (GOGAT)] pathway in which ATP is used to add ammonium to glutamate to form glutamine, and in combination with [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha-Ketoglutaric_acid alpha ketoglutarate], to subsequently remove the ammonium to form two glutamate molecules<ref name="nine" />.
 
====The Equilibrium Between Ammonification and Immobilization====
Ammonification and nitrogen immobilization are co-occuring processes, with ammonification occurring in the presence of a C/N ratio of less than 25<ref name="nine" />.There are several factors that influence whether there is net production or consumption of nitrogen by microorganisms in soil, including factors influencing chemical pathway rates, substrate availability and composition, and the chemical composition of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_food_web#Community_matrix_models soil matrix]<ref name="nine" />.
 
A very broad rule of thumb that estimates the direction of the equilibrium between ammonification and immobilization is the carbon to nitrogen ratio of the substrate. Various factors other than the C/N ratio may alter the equilibrium, such as lignin content, the moisture of the material being broken down, and the pH of the substrate and surrounding [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_food_web#Community_matrix_models soil matrix]<ref name="nine" />.
 
These factors also alter the decomposition rate of the materials. However another broad rule of thumb is that the less carbon there is, the more quickly that the material will decompose and the  nitrogenous compounds be made available.


Naturally, ammonification and nitrogen immobilization are coincidence. There are several factors influences whether there is net production or consumption by microorganisms in soil. The general principle is that net production occurs when nitrogen is not limiting.
The table below presents a few examples of C/N ratios<ref name="four" />.


Mineralization occurs at C/N ratios below 20 (Scow 2008).
<center><div>
{| class="wikitable" border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1"
!Material
!C/N Ratio
|-
|Wheat Straw
|80:1
|-
|Corn Stover
|57:1
|-
|Flowering Rye Cover Crop
|37:1
|-
|Vegetative Rye Cover Crop
|26:1
|-
|Mature Alfalfa Hay
|25:1
|-
|Ideal Microbial Diet
|24:1
|-
|Rotted Barnyard Manure
|20:1
|-
|Legume Hay
|17:1
|-
|Hairy Vetch Cover Crop
|11:1
|-
|Young Alfalfa Hay
|13:1
|-
|Soil Microbes (Average)
|8:1
|} </div></center>


====Key microoraganisms====
At C/N ratios above the ideal microbial diet (24:1) immobilization occurs due to the fact that there is a much greater amount of carbon that needs to be broken down – a process which requires more microbial biomass. Since the microbial biomass cannot retrieve the nitrogenous compounds until the carbon is broken down, the microorganisms convert inorganic nitrogen to organic nitrogen as an investment for their own growth.
The microbial degradation of amino compound and nucleic acids is driven by the consumption of heterotrophic microbes for carbon and energy. Thus the ammonium released as a result of ammonification can be considered a by-product of catabolism(Sylvia et al., 2005).


===Nitrogen Immobilization===
Once the material is decomposed and there is an excess of microbial biomass, the microbial population begins to die off and return to equilibrium. The dead biomass, with a C/N ratio of 8:1, can be quickly utilized by the remaining biomass as a food and energy source or as a mineralization source for plant symbiosis.
Immobilization is the conversion of ammonium and nitrate to organic nitrogen, primarily as a result of the assimilation of ammonium by the microbial biomass.The process requires energy for the conversion of nitrate to ammonium and subsequent incorporation of ammonium into amino acids.
 
C/N ratios below the ideal microbial diet cause mineralization due to the fact that there is an excess of organic nitrogenous compounds as a result of rapid substrate decomposition. The microbial biomass is not limited in growth by nitrogenous needs and organic nitrogen is converted to inorganic nitrogen for utilization for the purposes of plant growth and symbiosis.


====Key microoraganisms====
Most organic matter is 45% carbon by mass, and thus the C/N ratio is determined mainly by the nitrogen concentration found in the residues<ref name="nine" />. In agricultural systems, it is critical to properly determine and control the nitrogen concentration in the applied crop residue in order to influence the equilibrium in a manner that is conducive to the goals of the agricultural system.
Heterotrophic microbes and other organisms assimilate ammonium to build up biomass.


====C/N Ratios====
The net result of the equilibrium is influenced by biotic factors as well - 30% of yearly net mineralization is directly released by grazing and activities of soil animals such as protozoa and nematodes<ref name="nine" />. The same factors that influence the equilibrium in relation to microorganisms – soil moisture, pH, and the entirety of the soil matrix also have large roles in determining the activity of higher biotic agents and how much nitrogen they mineralize.
A carbon to nitrogen ration is the ratio of the mass of organic carbon to the mass of total nitrogen in soil or organic matter (Sylvia et al. 2005)
C/N ratios dictate whether the nitrogen gets immobilized or mineralized.  If the C/N ratio is less than 20 than the nitrogen will get mineralized.  If the C/N ratio is greater than 30 than it will get immobilized (Scow 2008).


If organisms have an excess of nitrogen than they will excrete NH<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup> back into the soil, returning nitrogen back into the system (Scow 2008).  If they are nitrogen depleted they will take nitrogen out from the soil leading to nitrogen deficiencies in the soil.
====Key microorganisms====
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterotroph Heterotrophic] microbes and other organisms assimilate ammonium to build up biomass. As in ammonification, microorganisms responsible for immobilization encompass a very broad group due to universal need for nitrogen for life.


===Nitrification===
==Nitrification==


Nitrification is the microbial production of nitrate from the oxidation of reduced nitrogen compound. This process is two-step process. The first step of lithoautotrophic nitrification is ammonia oxidation, the conversion of ammonium to nitrite by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria of Nitroso- genera. Then nitrite is oxidized to nitrate by the nitrite-oxidizing bacteria of the Nitro- genera (Sylvia et al., 2005). The process of nitrication is an acidifying reaction, and approximately 1-3% of the nitrogen is lost as a gas in the form of NO/N<sub>2</sub>O during nitrification (Dahlgren, 2007).  The nitrate produced can be lost from the soil ecosystem in two ways: through denitrification (concern for global warming), or through leaching(concern for groundwater management).
[[Image:nitrification.png|thumb|600px|right|Nitrification/Denitrifcation [http://nsspo.com/p1/Nitrification.htm Image Source]]]


Nitrification is a two-step process of ammonium (NH<sub>4</sub>) to nitrate (NO<sub>3</sub>) by soil bacteria<ref name="eleven" />. Ammonium is initially oxidized to nitrite by chemoautotrophs in the following manner<ref name="eleven" />:
NH<sub>3</sub> +  O<sub>2</sub> --> NO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> + H+ + H<sub>2</sub>O


Ammonia Oxidation: NH<sub>3</sub> + 1.5 O<sub>2</sub> --> NO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> + H<sup>+</sup>+H<sub>2</sub>O
Chemoautotrophs are able to use carbon dioxide as a carbon source for the oxidation of ammonium. The most common bacteria that oxidizes ammonium is [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Nitrosomonas ''Nitrosomonas'']<ref name="eleven" />. The second step of the nitrification process is the conversion of nitrite to nitrate:
NO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> + O<sub>2</sub> --> 2NO<sub>3</sub>- + 2H+ + 2e<sup>-</sup>


Nitrite Oxidation: NO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> + H<sub>2</sub>O --> NO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> + 2H<sup>+</sup> + 2e<sup>-</sup>
The most common group of bacteria that convert nitrite to nitrate are in the genus [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrobacter ''Nitrobacter'']. This group of soil bacteria obtain their energy from the ammonium oxidation process. Nitrite can be toxic to certain plants, thus the incomplete conversion of nitrite to nitrate may prevent plant growth in those areas<ref name="twelve">Groffman, P. M., Altabet, M. A., Böhlke, J. K., Butterbach-Bahl, K., David, M. B., Firestone, M. K., ... & Voytek, M. A. (2006). Methods for measuring denitrification: diverse approaches to a difficult problem. Ecological Applications, 16(6), 2091-2122. URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016%5b2091:MFMDDA%5d2.0.CO%3b2/abstract</ref>. It is important to ensure that nitrification occurs efficiently in food production systems as to prevent crop damage<ref name="twelve" />.


====Key microoraganisms====
==Denitrification==
Bacteria involved- [[nitrosomonas]], nitrobacter, e.g. [[Nitrobacter hamburgensis]], [[Nitrobacter winogradskyi]], Nitrococcus mobilis,and archaea are key players in this processes.


===Denitrification===
Denitrification is important in the continuation of the nitrogen cycle, as it is the step where gaseous dinitrogen is released back into the atmosphere. The natural cycle of denitrification comprises a series of enzymes such as bacterial NORs enzymes reduce nitrate to dinitrogen<ref name="thirteen">Gerardi, M. H. Introduction to Nitrification. Nitrification and Denitrification, 35-41. URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/0471216682.ch6/summary</ref>. As a result, reduction of nitrates to gaseous dinitrogen follows a series of respiratory biochemical reactions by microorganisms<ref name="thirteen" />. Bacteria involved in denitrification are facultative anaerobic organoheterotrophs such as [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Bacillus ''Bacillus'']<ref name="thirteen" />. The overall process of denitrification is as follows:


Denitrification is the conversion of nitrate to nitrogen gas in presence of low oxygen (Sylvia et al., 2005).  Nitrates are reduced to nitrites, and then the reduction of nitrites to nitrogen gas occurs. Because this process is carried out under anoxic or near anaerobic conditions, to create this condition in the experiment, soils were flooded by water. Denitirfication represents an overall loss of Nitrogen from a soil ecosystem, as nitrate is converted to an atmospheric form of nitrogen.  The overall or reaction is:
NO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> ------ > NO<sub>2</sub><sup>-</sup> ------> N<sub>2</sub>O ---------> NO-------> N<sub>2 </sub>


2 NO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> + 5H<sub>2</sub> + 2H<sup>+</sup> --> N<sub>2</sub> + 6 H<sub>2</sub>O
Nitrate -----> Nitrite ----> Nitric Oxide ----> Nitrous Oxide ------> Dinitrogen gas


The process of denitrification releases nitrous oxides into the atmosphere which is a problem regarding global warming.  Nitrous oxide is a greenhouse gas and is a compound responsible for the warming of the earth.
==Environmental Impacts==


====Key microoraganisms====
[[Image:NO2.png|thumb|600px|right|Photolysis of NO2 [http://serc.carleton.edu/eet/aura/case_study.html Image Source]]]
Most microorganisms who mediate this process are facultative anaerobic organoheterotrophs. Thiomicrospira is a group of sulfur oxidizing bacteria. They are distributed among the gamma and epsilon subdivisions of the Proteobacteria. [[Thiomicrospira denitrificans]] is a species who has ability to utilize nitrate as electron acceptor in denitrification.
The nitrogen cycle causes many environmental issues such as global warming and pollution itself. The global increase in temperature is mainly due to the release of greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases causes the blanket of air surrounding the earth to thicken, thus warming up the earth. The byproducts of the nitrogen cycle produce greenhouse effects, specifically in agricultural fields. Farmers input high amounts of ammonium nitrate to fertilize their soil to grow their crops. Consequently this increases the production of pollutants: nitrous oxide (N<sub>2</sub>O) and nitric oxide (NO), through denitrification<ref name="nine" />. CO<sub>2</sub>, another greenhouse gas, would also be produced from aerobic respiring microbes.


==The Nitrogen Cycle, Greenhouse gases and Groundwater pollution==
Excess nitrogen fixation has caused a lot of pollution into the biosphere. For example, nitrogen dioxide is degraded through photolysis to form oxygen radicals, which will react with molecular oxygen to form ozone in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropospherestratosphere troposphere], as shown in Figure 6. While ozone is beneficial in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratosphere stratosphere], where it can block UV radiation, ozone in the troposphere is a pollutant and can cause oxidative stress to humans and other organisms<ref name="three" />.


The process of denitrification releases nitrous oxide into the atmosphere. Nitrous oxide or "laughing gas" is the form of nitrogen that is a green house gas. Along with carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, water vapor, and halocarbons, nitrous oxide causes the blanket of air surrounding the earth to thicken; thus warming up the earth itself. This phenomenon has been dubbed "Global Warming" and understanding it's causes is key to preventing the mass destruction that will happen if green house gases remain unchecked. (The Environmental Literacy Council)
Mineralized nitrogen compounds in soil can be nitrified into nitrates, which can be leached into groundwater and cause contamination. Nitrate is soluble in water due to its negative charge; this polarization prevents adsorption onto the negatively charged soil surface and allows the soluble nitrate to leach into groundwater<ref name="three" />. Nitrate pollution is a major concern because of its many adverse effects such as [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methemoglobinemia methemoglobinemia], cancer, and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutrophication eutrophication]. Nitrification not only produces nitrates but also produces nitric acid, which will acidify bodies of water and harm sensitive marine life<ref name="three" />. Excessive nitrogen has also negatively affected terrestrial life by increasing the prevalence of pathogens, such as bacteria, viruses, and fungi. These pathogens were once limited by the lack of nitrogen but now have become more abundant<ref name="three" />.


Denitrification can help to mitigate nitrate levels associated with ground water pollution . Nitrate is a very mobile form of nitrogen and has been responsible for ground water pollution. Its mobility is due to its negative charge which repels it from clay particles in the soil. Nitrate is readily leached from the environment and can lead to ground water pollution. Nitrate pollution is a major concern and a cause of "blue baby syndrome" seen in infants. Denitrification reduces the amount of nitrate from the environment by converting it into atmospheric nitrogen which is a greenhouse gas.
===Strategies to Lessen Environmental Impact===
   
Some strategies to reduce mobile nitrogen in the biosphere are [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Bioremediation bioremediation], reduction of emissions, and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biosequestration sequestration]. [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Bioremediation Bioremediation] can reduce the amount of nitrate from the environment by converting it into atmospheric nitrogen and nitric oxide<ref name="nine" />. However, this has its own concerns because nitric oxide production must be limited to lessen effects of global warming. Reduction of emissions reduces the amount of nitrogen entering the biosphere, thus lessening the amount of mobile nitrogen available. Sequestration of nitrogen prevents nitrogen from becoming mobile and can be increased by selecting for crops with higher nitrogen uptake efficiency that are also able to form symbiotic relationships with nitrogen sequestering soil microorganisms<ref name="nine" />. There has been renewed interest in studying these relationships in the attempt to increase nitrogen sequestration in soil.


==Current Research==
==Current Research==


The Center of Limnology is currently studying the rise in organic nitrogen availability to microbes. Their findings may lead to an analysis of the consequences of anthropogenic nitrogen enrichment watersheds.  
Although the importance of soil microbes in the nitrogen cycle is well understood, current research is focused on the particular niches that different organisms occupy. Many of these experiments have identified some distinctive roles originally unknown to scientists, and are being studied for possible applications in agriculture and bioremediation practices.
To learn more visit their website at  http://cires.colorado.edu/limnology/research/


The nitrogen fertilizers cause environmental problems associated with leeching into our water systems and production of greenhouse gas. To decrease the usage of the fertilizers,the alternative ways to increase nitrogen available to plants are investigated. Nodulation process forming of symbiosis between nitrogen-fixation bacteria and plant is one of the interested research nowadays. Recent research has shown the evidences that the genes, called symbiosis-receptor-kinase-gene (SMYRK), are involved in a genetic program that links arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) and one form of bacterial nodule symbiosis. Moreover, the analysis of SYMRK in several species of plant provided the evidence that the functions of SYMRK constituted an important step in the evolution of intracellular nodule symbiosis. Most plants have a short version of SMYRK, which is required for AM symbiosis. A longer variant of SMYRK was found only in plants involved in the symbiotic relationships with nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Importantly, the longer version was found in both legumes which form symbioses with rhizobia and in actinorhiza which form symbiotic relationships with [[Frankia]] bacteria, about which there is little genetic information. The results therefore suggest a common evolutionary origin of intracellular root symbioses with nitrogen-fixing bacteria (Markmann et al., 2008).
[[Image:Nem.png|thumb|310px|left|Nematode consuming a bacterium [http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MEDIA/nrcs142p2_050122.jpg Image Source]]]


==References==
One study highlights a symbiotic relationship between plants and a known predator that solidifies the networks within the nitrogen cycle. It was found that [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematode nematodes] present in the soil consumed bacteria that did not produce the plant growth hormone [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indole-3-acetic_acid indole acetic acid (IAA)]<ref name="fourteen">Cheng, Y., Jiang, Y., Wu, Y., Valentine, T. A., & Li, H. (2016). Soil Nitrogen Status Modifies Rice Root Response to Nematode-Bacteria Interactions in the Rhizosphere. PLOS ONE PLoS ONE, 11(2). Retrieved March 09, 2016. http://www.be-md.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4739600/</ref>. As a result, there was less competition and increased resources for the IAA-producing bacteria, allowing them to proliferate under sufficient ammonia concentrations and produce more IAA for plant use. The increased availability of IAA to the plants allowed for increased growth rates. The study clarifies the roles of the different soil organisms and how they interact in relation to soil nitrogen levels, showing that indirect biological control of plant growth by the various soil food web organisms is a key feature in the nitrogen cycle<ref name="fourteen" />.
Sylvia, D.M., Fuhrmann, J.J., Hartel, P.G.,& Zuberer, D.A. (2005). Principles and application of soil microbiology. 2nd edition.


[http://biology.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pbio.0060068 Markmann K, Giczey G, Parniske M (2008) Functional Adaptation of a Plant Receptor- Kinase Paved the Way for the Evolution of Intracellular Root Symbioses with Bacteria. PLoS Biol 6(3): e68 doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0060068]
[[Image:AM1.png|thumb|390px|right|Overall leached nitrate reduced in soil inoculated with AM fungi [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=MiamiCaptionURL&_method=retrieve&_eid=1-s2.0-S0038071715004125&_image=1-s2.0-S0038071715004125-gr4.jpg&_cid=271195&_explode=defaultEXP_LIST&_idxType=defaultREF_WORK_INDEX_TYPE&_alpha=defaultALPHA&_ba=&_rdoc=1&_fmt=FULL&_issn=00380717&_pii=S0038071715004125&md5=b5c605c748054c34a2cace1e97320bc9 Image Source]]]


"Green House Gases." The Environmental Literacy Council. 2002. Last Updated May 2007. http://www.enviroliteracy.org/article.php/428.html
[https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Rhizosphere:_environment_and_mycorrhizal_fungi#Mycorrhizal_Fungi Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi] benefically obtain nitrogen for their host plant<ref name="sixteen">Köhl, L., & Heijden, M. G. (2016). Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal species differ in their effect on nutrient leaching. Soil Biology and Biochemistry, 94, 191-199. Retrieved March 10, 2016. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0038071715004125</ref>. Researchers measured this capacity for nitrogen sequestration as a potential method to reduce harmful nitrate leaching into soil and groundwater.Their experiment observed two types of host plants: Lolium, an obligate ryegrass with an affinity for AM fungi, and Trifolium, a [https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Legume-Rhizobium legume] with no preference for AM fungi. The amount of nitrogen in Trifolium’s biomass inoculated with AM fungi was significantly higher than its non-inoculated comparison. However, the Lolium’s nitrogen content was similar to the inoculated Trifolium. This signifies the critical relationship between host plants to their AM fungi in sequestering nitrogen. Researchers found consistent reduction in leached nitrate in both the grass and the legume. Compared to the control, the addition of AM fungi reduced the overall concentration of nitrate in both treatment soils. Lolium legume has a significant reduction in nitrate compared to the control, meaning that the AM fungi supplemented the processes of the nitrogen-fixing bacteria<ref name="sixteen" />.


Scow, K (2008). Nitrogen Cycle
==References==
<references />


Dalhgren, R (2007). Topic 3 Lecture on Nutrient Cycling
Edited by student of [mailto:kmscow@ucdavis.edu Kate Scow]


Edited by student of [mailto:kmscow@ucdavis.edu Kate Scow]
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Animation of N cycle Image Source

Nitrogen is one of the most abundant elements on Earth - it makes up 78% of the atmosphere, 16% of all protein diets[1], and is present at a concentration of 7.5 kilograms for every 250 kilograms of human feces[2].

The different forms of nitrogen undergo various chemical and physical transformations that are all equally critical to the global nitrogen cycle. Over the last few decades, excessive fertilizer and fossil fuel usage have lead to serious environmental problems, which have increased disease and pollution. Some of these issues include nitrate-contaminated groundwater, eutrophication, and increased production of carbon dioxide, methane, and other harmful greenhouse gases in the carbon cycle[3].

Accordingly, researchers have focused on balancing the cost to the benefits of human activities. As part of the global nitrogen cycle, soil is heavily studied not only because a significant amount of nitrogen is stored in the soil[3], but also because the increasing human population demands more nitrogen for food production.

In soil, most of the chemical transformations of nitrogen are due to microbial activities, such as nitrogen fixation, nitrification, immobilization, and denitrification. Learning how organisms behave in soil is critical for humans to understand the complex nitrogen cycle.

Nitrogen cycle processes

Soil Nitrogen Cycle Image Source

Natural Soil Nitrogen Cycle

Dinitrogen is an essential element for the nitrogen cycle. The symbiotic microbes fix the dinitrogen (N2) into volatile ammonia, NH3, by the process of nitrogen fixation. The ammonia is further protonated to ammonium, NH4+, which is uptaken by plants to manufacture amino acids for growth. When plants decompose, the organic molecules present in the plant residues become a source of nitrogen and other nutrients to soil microbes. The microbes conduct mineralization (ammonification) to utilize the organic molecules as electron donors, acquiring energy and producing ammonium. In contrast, the transformation of organic nitrogen to ammonium is reversible through immobilization (assimilation) when the carbon to nitrogen ratio (C/N ratio) is high[4]. Ammonium can also undergo nitrification to produce NO3- in an aerobic environments. The NO3- can be utilized by plants or by other organisms in anaerobic environments as an electron acceptor, can leach out by dissolving in water, or be reduced to dinitrogen gas via denitrification processes in anaerobic conditions. During the denitrification and nitrification processes nitrous oxide, N2O, is produced and escapes into atmosphere.

Anthropogenic Influences on the Soil Nitrogen Cycle

One major influence of human input is reduced biological nitrogen fixation. With excessive ammonium input, plants no longer need the symbiotic microbes to provide ammonium. As a result, the degree of symbiosis will be diminished. Furthermore, the excessive ammonium provides nutrients for nitrifiers to produce nitrate, causing an increase in the amount of leached nitrate. Another negative outcome of anthropogenic inputs is the increased emission of nitrous oxide into the atmosphere due to increased nitrification and denitrification from excessive ammonium inputs[3].

Nitrogen fixation

Nitrogenase Pathway Image Source

Prokaryotes(bacteria) are responsible for the nitrogen fixation inside the soil. They mostly establish associative relationships with leguminous plants and other plant species[5]. Yet, there are free-living bacteria like Azotobacter[6]. All of the prokaryotes that are capable of nitrogen fixation have nitrogenase, which can fix nitrogen into ammonia. Many prokaryotes share the same enzyme complex through horizontal gene transfer via plasmids or evolutionary events[6].

Nitrogen Fixation Mechanism

The overall reaction catalyzed by nitrogenase is N2 + 8H+ + 8e- + 16 ATP = 2NH3 + H2 + 16ADP + 16 Pi[7]. In the process, nitrogen is used to replace a pair of hydrogen molecules on the nitrogenase complex, which has been heavily reduced along with protonation. The rest of the H+ will bond to the nitrogen and reform the structure of the molecule. Then, H+ continues to be added to the complex and binds with an NH group to form NH3. Each complex is able to produce two NH3 molecules in each cycle of this process[7]. Once NH3 leaves the nitrogenase complex, it will be rapidly protonated to NH4+.

Mechanisms of Creating Anaerobic Environment

Nitrogenase are inhibited by O2[8], thus anaerobic environments are required for conducting nitrogen fixation. Free-living bacteria like Azotobacter have a couple of methods to overcome the aerobic condition. Azotobacter has a very high rate of respiratory metabolism so that it can keep the concentration of oxygen low within the cell in order to protect the nitrogenase enzyme. The second method adapted by cultured Azotobacter and Rhizobium species is to excrete large amounts of extracellular polymers that reduce the diffusion of oxygen. Leghemoglobin is a molecule in legume modules that are used to trap oxygen via chemical mechanisms that are similar to those used in hemoglobin[8]. Other microorganisms, such as the cyanobacteria Nostoc, form special structures with thick cell walls that exclude oxygen and allow the cell to provide fixed nitrogen to its neighbors. Other cyanobacteria species have specific cells within their body that are only used for nitrogen fixation. In these cells, there is only photosystem I for ATP generation, whereas other cells have both photosystem I and II, which generate oxygen. Alternative nitrogenase that are not deactivated by oxygen do exist but are found in a relatively small number of organisms[8].

Key Microorganisms

Lichen of Fungi and Algae Image Source

The portion of nitrogen fixed by prokaryotes make up the vast majority of all biologically active nitrogen on the planet. Diazotrophs are a category of all organisms that are capable of fixing nitrogen[9]. Diazotrophs either coexist with plants via symbiosis or have the ability to live freely inside the soil. Azorhizobium, Bradyrhizobium, Rhizobium, Bradyrhizobium, Sinorhizobium, Mesorhizobium, and Allorhizobium are genera that have symbiotic relationships with leguminous plants [5]. Diazotrophs modify leguminous root hairs into nodules to create an anaerobic environment and to provide an energy source in the form of organic carbon. In return, bacteria provide ammonium to the plant as a component for plant growth. There are also other genera that have different relationships with plants. For instance, Frankia has actinorrhizal symbiosis with a tree genus known as Casuarina[5]. There are some genera, like Azotobacter, that live freely in aerobic environments. and some, like Desulfovibrio, that live freely in anaerobic environments[8]. A more unique example of a symbiotic relationship is that of lichens. Cyanobacteria, which is a photoautotrophic genus that fixes nitrogen, are protected by fungal hyphae. In return, the fungi receive a critical nutrient source in the form of ammonium [10].

Nitrogen Ammonification

Net nitrogen mineralization is commonly defined as the sum of concurrent ammonium production and consumption processes[9]. However, in recent years, it has been shown that mineralization also is driven by depolymerization of nitrogen containing polymers available to use both by plants and microorganisms[11], and thus it is more correct to call the process ammonification or gross nitrogen mineralization.

The new paradigm regarding nitrogen cycling rethinks mineralization as the center point in the nitrogen cycle[11], and instead regards depolymerization of nitrogen containing polymers as what regulates the nitrogen cycle. Ammonification or gross nitrogen mineralization is the conversion of organic-nitrogen polymers to ammonium, mediated by heterotrophic microbes. The microbial degradation of amino acids, sugars, and nucleic acids is seen as a need for energy and carbon, with ammonium released as a byproduct of catabolism[9]. Since the polymers are not immediately bioavailable due to their large size, they are first cleaved by extracellular enzymes[11].

Change in Paradigm Concerning the Nitrogen Cycle

[11]

The extracellular enzymes are created by microorganisms, and have the capacity to depolymerize proteins, aminopolysaccharides found in cell walls, nucleic acids, and to hydrolyze urea[9]. Proteins are broken down by a wide variety of proteinases (large proteins), proteases, and peptidases that cleave dipeptides or split individual amino acids. Some examples of isolated proteolytic enzymes are subtilism, clostripain, and thermolysin[9].

Several common extracellular polymers degrade cell wall polymers, producing an end product of individual amino sugar monomers[9]. In fungi which contain primarily chitin cell walls, chitinase degrades the cell walls into dimers, and then chitobiase breaks down each dimer into N-acetylglucosamine[9]. In bacteria containing peptidoglycan cell walls, several enzymes, the most predominant of which is lysozyme, breaks the beta linkages holding the polymer together[9].

Nucleic acids are degraded by RNases and DNases, which hydrolyze ester ester bonds between phosphate and pentose sugars that make up the backbone of DNA and RNA, resulting in an end product of individual nucleotides[9].

Ureases hydrolyze urea into carbon dioxide and ammonium, which plays a key role in immediate fertilization plant availability[9]. The cofactor of the urease enzyme is nickel[9].

The research on extracellular enzymes and soil constituents has revealed some insight into the complexity of the soil matrix. An enzyme and substrate may bind to clay surfaces, protecting them from degradation and resulting in a slow degradation of the substrate over time[9]. In addition, an enzyme can remain active and act on an available substrate if its catalytic site is unaffected and structure unaltered by adsorption to the clay surface[9].

Intracellular enzymes play a critical role in nitrogen transformations[9]. In most cases, the final product of ammonium occurs as a result of intracellular enzymes within microbial cells. There are two types of nitrogen found in amino acids: amine and amide. In the amide, the asparagine and glutamate are cleaved by aspariginase and glutaminase. In the amine, amino acid dehydrogenases and oxidases release the amino nitrogen in a process called deamination.

Amino sugars are metabolized in two steps - kinase phosphorylation followed by deamination[9]. The degradation of nucleotides and subsequent ammonium release involves multiple steps - nucleotides are hydrolyzed to produce nucleosides and phosphate (PO43-), the nucleosides are then further hydrolyzed to purines and pyrimidine bases and pentose sugar molecule parts, and finally the ammonium is released during the catabolism of the purines and pyrimidines with a urea intermediate[9].

Key microorganisms

The groups of microorganisms responsible for ammonification are very broad and cover a wide range of species.

Organoheterotrophs are an example of a group of microorganisms that mineralize nitrogen, often going after carbon in addition to the nitrogenous compounds present in the plant residue.

Nitrogen Immobilization

Immobilization is the conversion of ammonium and nitrate to organic nitrogen, primarily as a result of the assimilation of ammonium by the microbial biomass.The process requires energy for the conversion of nitrate to ammonium and subsequent incorporation of ammonium into amino acids.

Microorganisms assimilate ammonium by two secondary pathways - the end result of both pathways is glutamate, which is then transferred to other carbon skeletons by transaminase reactions that form amino acids[9].

The first pathway occurs under a high concentration of ammonium (about 0.5 milligrams of nitrogen per kilogram of soil), in which NADPH2 coenzymes adds ammonium to alpha ketoglutarate in order to form glutamate[9].

The second pathway occurs in lower concentrations of ammonium and uses a glutamine synthetase-glutamate synthetase (GOGAT) pathway in which ATP is used to add ammonium to glutamate to form glutamine, and in combination with alpha ketoglutarate, to subsequently remove the ammonium to form two glutamate molecules[9].

The Equilibrium Between Ammonification and Immobilization

Ammonification and nitrogen immobilization are co-occuring processes, with ammonification occurring in the presence of a C/N ratio of less than 25[9].There are several factors that influence whether there is net production or consumption of nitrogen by microorganisms in soil, including factors influencing chemical pathway rates, substrate availability and composition, and the chemical composition of the soil matrix[9].

A very broad rule of thumb that estimates the direction of the equilibrium between ammonification and immobilization is the carbon to nitrogen ratio of the substrate. Various factors other than the C/N ratio may alter the equilibrium, such as lignin content, the moisture of the material being broken down, and the pH of the substrate and surrounding soil matrix[9].

These factors also alter the decomposition rate of the materials. However another broad rule of thumb is that the less carbon there is, the more quickly that the material will decompose and the nitrogenous compounds be made available.

The table below presents a few examples of C/N ratios[4].

Material C/N Ratio
Wheat Straw 80:1
Corn Stover 57:1
Flowering Rye Cover Crop 37:1
Vegetative Rye Cover Crop 26:1
Mature Alfalfa Hay 25:1
Ideal Microbial Diet 24:1
Rotted Barnyard Manure 20:1
Legume Hay 17:1
Hairy Vetch Cover Crop 11:1
Young Alfalfa Hay 13:1
Soil Microbes (Average) 8:1

At C/N ratios above the ideal microbial diet (24:1) immobilization occurs due to the fact that there is a much greater amount of carbon that needs to be broken down – a process which requires more microbial biomass. Since the microbial biomass cannot retrieve the nitrogenous compounds until the carbon is broken down, the microorganisms convert inorganic nitrogen to organic nitrogen as an investment for their own growth.

Once the material is decomposed and there is an excess of microbial biomass, the microbial population begins to die off and return to equilibrium. The dead biomass, with a C/N ratio of 8:1, can be quickly utilized by the remaining biomass as a food and energy source or as a mineralization source for plant symbiosis.

C/N ratios below the ideal microbial diet cause mineralization due to the fact that there is an excess of organic nitrogenous compounds as a result of rapid substrate decomposition. The microbial biomass is not limited in growth by nitrogenous needs and organic nitrogen is converted to inorganic nitrogen for utilization for the purposes of plant growth and symbiosis.

Most organic matter is 45% carbon by mass, and thus the C/N ratio is determined mainly by the nitrogen concentration found in the residues[9]. In agricultural systems, it is critical to properly determine and control the nitrogen concentration in the applied crop residue in order to influence the equilibrium in a manner that is conducive to the goals of the agricultural system.

The net result of the equilibrium is influenced by biotic factors as well - 30% of yearly net mineralization is directly released by grazing and activities of soil animals such as protozoa and nematodes[9]. The same factors that influence the equilibrium in relation to microorganisms – soil moisture, pH, and the entirety of the soil matrix also have large roles in determining the activity of higher biotic agents and how much nitrogen they mineralize.

Key microorganisms

Heterotrophic microbes and other organisms assimilate ammonium to build up biomass. As in ammonification, microorganisms responsible for immobilization encompass a very broad group due to universal need for nitrogen for life.

Nitrification

Nitrification/Denitrifcation Image Source

Nitrification is a two-step process of ammonium (NH4) to nitrate (NO3) by soil bacteria[11]. Ammonium is initially oxidized to nitrite by chemoautotrophs in the following manner[11]: NH3 + O2 --> NO2- + H+ + H2O

Chemoautotrophs are able to use carbon dioxide as a carbon source for the oxidation of ammonium. The most common bacteria that oxidizes ammonium is Nitrosomonas[11]. The second step of the nitrification process is the conversion of nitrite to nitrate: NO2- + O2 --> 2NO3- + 2H+ + 2e-

The most common group of bacteria that convert nitrite to nitrate are in the genus Nitrobacter. This group of soil bacteria obtain their energy from the ammonium oxidation process. Nitrite can be toxic to certain plants, thus the incomplete conversion of nitrite to nitrate may prevent plant growth in those areas[12]. It is important to ensure that nitrification occurs efficiently in food production systems as to prevent crop damage[12].

Denitrification

Denitrification is important in the continuation of the nitrogen cycle, as it is the step where gaseous dinitrogen is released back into the atmosphere. The natural cycle of denitrification comprises a series of enzymes such as bacterial NORs enzymes reduce nitrate to dinitrogen[13]. As a result, reduction of nitrates to gaseous dinitrogen follows a series of respiratory biochemical reactions by microorganisms[13]. Bacteria involved in denitrification are facultative anaerobic organoheterotrophs such as Bacillus[13]. The overall process of denitrification is as follows:

NO3- ------ > NO2- ------> N2O ---------> NO-------> N2

Nitrate -----> Nitrite ----> Nitric Oxide ----> Nitrous Oxide ------> Dinitrogen gas

Environmental Impacts

Photolysis of NO2 Image Source

The nitrogen cycle causes many environmental issues such as global warming and pollution itself. The global increase in temperature is mainly due to the release of greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases causes the blanket of air surrounding the earth to thicken, thus warming up the earth. The byproducts of the nitrogen cycle produce greenhouse effects, specifically in agricultural fields. Farmers input high amounts of ammonium nitrate to fertilize their soil to grow their crops. Consequently this increases the production of pollutants: nitrous oxide (N2O) and nitric oxide (NO), through denitrification[9]. CO2, another greenhouse gas, would also be produced from aerobic respiring microbes.

Excess nitrogen fixation has caused a lot of pollution into the biosphere. For example, nitrogen dioxide is degraded through photolysis to form oxygen radicals, which will react with molecular oxygen to form ozone in the troposphere, as shown in Figure 6. While ozone is beneficial in the stratosphere, where it can block UV radiation, ozone in the troposphere is a pollutant and can cause oxidative stress to humans and other organisms[3].

Mineralized nitrogen compounds in soil can be nitrified into nitrates, which can be leached into groundwater and cause contamination. Nitrate is soluble in water due to its negative charge; this polarization prevents adsorption onto the negatively charged soil surface and allows the soluble nitrate to leach into groundwater[3]. Nitrate pollution is a major concern because of its many adverse effects such as methemoglobinemia, cancer, and eutrophication. Nitrification not only produces nitrates but also produces nitric acid, which will acidify bodies of water and harm sensitive marine life[3]. Excessive nitrogen has also negatively affected terrestrial life by increasing the prevalence of pathogens, such as bacteria, viruses, and fungi. These pathogens were once limited by the lack of nitrogen but now have become more abundant[3].

Strategies to Lessen Environmental Impact

Some strategies to reduce mobile nitrogen in the biosphere are bioremediation, reduction of emissions, and sequestration. Bioremediation can reduce the amount of nitrate from the environment by converting it into atmospheric nitrogen and nitric oxide[9]. However, this has its own concerns because nitric oxide production must be limited to lessen effects of global warming. Reduction of emissions reduces the amount of nitrogen entering the biosphere, thus lessening the amount of mobile nitrogen available. Sequestration of nitrogen prevents nitrogen from becoming mobile and can be increased by selecting for crops with higher nitrogen uptake efficiency that are also able to form symbiotic relationships with nitrogen sequestering soil microorganisms[9]. There has been renewed interest in studying these relationships in the attempt to increase nitrogen sequestration in soil.

Current Research

Although the importance of soil microbes in the nitrogen cycle is well understood, current research is focused on the particular niches that different organisms occupy. Many of these experiments have identified some distinctive roles originally unknown to scientists, and are being studied for possible applications in agriculture and bioremediation practices.

Nematode consuming a bacterium Image Source

One study highlights a symbiotic relationship between plants and a known predator that solidifies the networks within the nitrogen cycle. It was found that nematodes present in the soil consumed bacteria that did not produce the plant growth hormone indole acetic acid (IAA)[14]. As a result, there was less competition and increased resources for the IAA-producing bacteria, allowing them to proliferate under sufficient ammonia concentrations and produce more IAA for plant use. The increased availability of IAA to the plants allowed for increased growth rates. The study clarifies the roles of the different soil organisms and how they interact in relation to soil nitrogen levels, showing that indirect biological control of plant growth by the various soil food web organisms is a key feature in the nitrogen cycle[14].

Overall leached nitrate reduced in soil inoculated with AM fungi Image Source

Arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi benefically obtain nitrogen for their host plant[15]. Researchers measured this capacity for nitrogen sequestration as a potential method to reduce harmful nitrate leaching into soil and groundwater.Their experiment observed two types of host plants: Lolium, an obligate ryegrass with an affinity for AM fungi, and Trifolium, a legume with no preference for AM fungi. The amount of nitrogen in Trifolium’s biomass inoculated with AM fungi was significantly higher than its non-inoculated comparison. However, the Lolium’s nitrogen content was similar to the inoculated Trifolium. This signifies the critical relationship between host plants to their AM fungi in sequestering nitrogen. Researchers found consistent reduction in leached nitrate in both the grass and the legume. Compared to the control, the addition of AM fungi reduced the overall concentration of nitrate in both treatment soils. Lolium legume has a significant reduction in nitrate compared to the control, meaning that the AM fungi supplemented the processes of the nitrogen-fixing bacteria[15].

References

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Edited by student of Kate Scow