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Denitrifying bacteria convert nitrate to dinitrogen gas.
In addition, many bacteria can convert nitrate to amines for purposes of synthesizing cellular materials or to ammonia when nitrate is used as electron acceptor.
Sulphur-oxidizing Thiobacillus denitrificans, the most abundant bacterial species in HSFW sediments, can convert nitrate to nitrite and support anammox bacteria with the necessary substrate to complete nitrogen removal.
Thankfully, nitrate is a raw material for the metabolism of certain bacteria, known as denitrifiers that convert nitrate to nitrogen gas that is released to the atmosphere.
These are not only excellent wildlife habitat, but they also harbor denitrifying bacteria, which convert nitrate in the streamwater to the nitrogen gas (N2) that fills 78% of our atmosphere.
P. tibetensis sp. is a kind of denitrification bacteria, which cannot produce degradation enzymes but was able to convert nitrate to nitrogen and provided the nitrogen source for the growth of other organisms.
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The enzyme converts nitrate into nitrite.
Denitrification is a reductive process which converts nitrate (NO3) into atmospheric nitrogen (N2) through nitrite (NO2), nitric oxide (NO), and nitrous oxide (N2O).
Resistance detection with the NRA is based on visual observation of a pink to purple color in a culture tube upon addition of the so called Griess reagent, due to nitro-reductase enzymes in metabolically active mycobacterial cells converting nitrate to nitrite [12].
Nitrate reductase converted nitrate to nitrite, and Griess reaction was used to detect nitrate inside media.
These two enzymes catalyze two reactions required for converting nitrate to the end product, nitrogen gas.
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