Bacteria Breathe Rocks, Sulfur

University of Vienna

An international team of scientists led by microbiologists Marc Mussmann and Alexander Loy from the University of Vienna has discovered a new microbial metabolism: so-called MISO bacteria "breathe" iron minerals by oxidizing toxic sulfide. The researchers found that the reaction between toxic hydrogen sulfide and solid iron minerals is not only a chemical process, but also a previously unknown biological process in which versatile microbes in marine sediments and terrestrial wetlands remove toxic sulfide and use it for their growth. These bacteria could prevent the spread of oxygen-free "dead zones" in aquatic environments. The findings have now been published in Nature.

The global element cycles

The biogeochemical cycles of carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, and iron describe how these elements are transformed through reduction and oxidation (redox) reactions and how they move between the atmosphere, water, soil, rocks, and living organisms. These cycles are intricately linked to Earth's climate, as they regulate the flow of greenhouse gases and influence the planet's temperature balance. Microorganisms are central to nearly every step of these redox transformations, using compounds like sulfur and iron for respiration in much the same way humans use oxygen to metabolize food.

Sulfur and iron are particularly vital for microbial life in oxygen-deprived environments, such as the ocean floor or wetlands. Sulfur exists in various forms — as a gas in the atmosphere, as sulfate in oceans, or as part of minerals in rocks. Similarly, iron can transition between different forms depending on the presence of oxygen. When microbes metabolize sulfur, they often alter the form of iron simultaneously, and vice versa. This coupling of sulfur and iron cycles has far-reaching implications, influencing nutrient availability and the production or breakdown of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane. Understanding these interconnected cycles is crucial for predicting how ecosystems respond to pollution, climate change, and other human activities.

Breathing iron minerals to detoxify Sulfide

The activities of specialized microbes in oxygen-free environments such as marine sediments, wetlands, and freshwater aquifers produce hydrogen sulfide - a toxic gas with a distinctive rotten egg smell. The interaction between sulfide and solid iron(III) oxide minerals such as rusty iron plays a key role in controlling sulfide concentrations. Until now, biogeochemical models have treated this reaction as purely abiotic, primarily resulting in the formation of elemental sulfur and iron monosulfide (FeS), a black mineral that is, for example, responsible for dark coloration of beach sediments under low oxygen.

"We show that this environmentally important redox reaction is not solely chemical," explains Alexander Loy, research group leader at CeMESS, the Centre for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Science at the University of Vienna. "Microorganisms can also harness it for growth."

The newly discovered microbial energy metabolism, shortly termed MISO, couples the reduction of iron(III) oxide with the oxidation of sulfide. Unlike the chemical reaction, MISO directly produces sulfate, effectively bypassing intermediate steps in the sulfur cycle. "MISO bacteria remove toxic sulfide and may help prevent the expansion of so-called "dead zones" in aquatic environments, while fixing carbon dioxide for growth - similar to plants," adds Marc Mussmann, senior scientist at CeMESS.

A globally important microbial process that outpaces chemistry

In laboratory growth experiments with a cultivated MISO bacterium, the researchers demonstrated that the enzymatically catalyzed reaction is faster than the equivalent chemical reaction. This suggests that microbes are the primary drivers of this process in nature. "Diverse bacteria and archaea possess the genetic capacity for MISO," explains Song-Can Chen, lead author of the study, "and they are found in a wide range of natural and human-made environments." In marine sediments, MISO could account for up to 7% of global sulfide oxidation to sulfate, driven by the substantial flux of reactive iron from rivers and melting glaciers into the oceans.

The findings of the University of Vienna team, which is supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) as part of the 'Microbiomes Drive Planetary Health' Cluster of Excellence, reveal a previously unknown biological mechanism that links sulfur, iron, and carbon cycling in oxygen-free environments. "This discovery demonstrates the metabolic ingenuity of microorganisms and highlights their indispensable role in shaping Earth's global element cycles." Alexander Loy concludes.

Further links:

Research group of Alexander Loy

Division of Microbial Ecology, University of Vienna

Centre for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Science (CeMESS), University of Vienna

FWF Cluster of Excellence – Microbiomes drive Planetary Health

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