Nitrogen fixation
Bacteria convert N2 to NH3 / NH4+
Nitrification
Bacteria oxidize ammonia (NH3) into nitrite (NO2) and nitrate (NO3)
Denitrification
Nitrate and Nitrite are reduced to N2 under anaerobic conditions
Assimilation
Plants reduce NO3 to NO2 and then NO2 to NH4+ by nitrite and nitrate reductases
Describe nitrate assimilation
Describe nitrite assimilation
What are the challenges associated with reducing nitrogen?
Due to the triple bond, Nitrogen has an extremely high activation energy
How do bacteria such as diazotrophs convert N2 into ammonia?
By utilizing nitrogenase complex which overcomes the high activation energy by consuming lots of ATP
Describe the nitrogenase complex
What are the 3 cofactors involved in the nitrogenase complex?
Describe the reduction of dinitrogenase
Dintrogenase reductase gives electrons to dintirogenase
1. Dinotrogenase reductase picks up 8e- from feredoxin
2. Reduced dinitorgenase binds 16 ATP
3. Once ATP is bound dinitrogenase reductase transfers electrons one at a time to dinitrogenase
4. Dinitrogenase reductase will then return back to its oxidized form where it can pick up more electrons from ferrodoxin
5. Now that dinotrogenase has been reduced, it can transfer electrons to N2 reducing it to NH4+
Describe how dinitrogenase converts N2 to NH4+
Describe the symbiotic relationship between leguminous plants and nitrogen-fixing bacteria
What is the significance of leghemoglobin?
Leghemoglobin binds all available O2 so that it cannot interfere with N2 fixation
Nitrogenase cofactors must be kept away from O2