Denitrification-driven transcription and enzyme production at the
river–groundwater interface: Insights from reactive-transport modeling
Abstract
The interface between rivers and groundwater is a key driver for the
turnover of reactive nitrogen compounds, that cause eutrophication of
rivers and endanger drinking-water production from groundwater.
Molecular-biological data and omics tools have been used to characterize
microorganisms responsible for the turnover of nitrogen compounds. While
transcripts of functional genes and enzymes are used as measures of
microbial activity it is not yet clear how they quantitatively relate to
actual turnover rates under variable environmental conditions. We
developed a reactive-transport model for denitrification that
simultaneously predicts the distributions of functional-gene
transcripts, enzymes and reaction rates. Applying the model, we evaluate
the response of transcripts and enzymes at the river–groundwater
interface to stable and dynamic hydrogeochemical regimes. While
functional-gene transcripts respond to short-term (diurnal) fluctuations
of substrate availability and oxygen concentrations, enzyme
concentrations are stable over such time scales. The presence of
functional-gene transcripts and enzymes globally coincides with the
zones of active denitrification. However, transcript and enzyme
concentrations do not directly translate into denitrification rates in a
quantitative way because of non-linear effects and hysteresis caused by
variable substrate availability and oxygen inhibition. Based on our
simulations, we suggest that molecular-biological data should be
combined with aqueous chemical data, which can typically be obtained at
higher spatial and temporal resolution, to parameterize and calibrate
reactive-transport models.