Exploring Sulfate as an Alternative Electron Acceptor: A Potential Strategy to Mitigate N2O Emissions in Upland Arable Soils.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Hyun Ho Lee
  • Hanbeen Kim
  • Ye Lim Park
  • Marcus A Horn
  • Jeongeun Kim
  • Jaehyun Lee
  • Sakae Toyoda
  • Jeongeun Yun
  • Hojeong Kang
  • Sang Yoon Kim
  • Jinho Ahn
  • Chang Oh Hong

Research Organisations

External Research Organisations

  • University of British Columbia
  • Kyung Hee University
  • Seoul National University
  • Korea Institute of Science and Technology
  • Institute of Science Tokyo (Science Tokyo)
  • Pusan National University
  • Yonsei University
  • Sunchon National University
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Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70428
JournalGlobal change biology
Volume31
Issue number8
Publication statusPublished - 13 Aug 2025

Abstract

Agricultural activities are a significant source of nitrous oxide (N 2O), accounting for approximately 60% of global emissions, highlighting the urgent need for innovative strategies to mitigate N 2O emissions. Microbes conserve nearly as much energy with nitrate (NO 3 -) as oxygen (O 2) respiration under limited O 2 availability. Thus, microorganisms prioritize NO 3 -, limiting exploration of alternative electron acceptors (EAs) to inhibit N 2O emissions through NO 3 - respiration in upland arable soils. Current approaches remain insufficient, and the interactions between alternative EA reduction and pathways for N 2O emissions remain poorly understood. This study evaluated oxidized iron, manganese, and sulfate as alternative EAs to reduce N 2O emissions, along with the effects of zero-valent metals (ZVMs). Metal sulfates (MSs) significantly minimized N 2O emissions by inhibiting denitrification rather than altering nitrification in microcosms, as supported by isotope mapping and inorganic nitrogen concentrations. Among others, putative complete denitrifiers, N 2O reducers, and sulfate reducers were stimulated, whereas ZVMs stimulated N 2O emissions and 16S rRNA gene abundance. Moreover, the abundance of denitrifier-related genes (nirK, nirS, norB, and nosZ) consistently decreased under MS treatments, while dsrA mRNA abundance significantly increased. Sulfate (SO 4 2-) addition reshaped the soil microbial community by enriching sulfur-cycling taxa-including sulfate-reducing and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria-while suppressing nitrifiers such as Nitrospira, potentially disrupting nitrification-denitrification coupling. Ureibacillus thermosphaerius, harboring genes for denitrification and SO 4 2- reduction, increased under MS treatment. These shifts likely redirected electron flow toward SO 4 2- respiration, reducing NO 3 - utilization and contributing to N 2O mitigation. Field-based manipulation experiments over 2 years demonstrated the feasibility of MSs in upland arable soils, reducing yield-scaled N 2O emissions by 21.5% without compromising crop yields. A systematic literature review and meta-analysis revealed that SO 4 2- application mitigated N 2O emissions by an average of 9%, with over 70% of observations showing a decreasing trend, underscoring its potential as an effective soil amendment for sustainable agriculture.

Keywords

    Denitrification, Nitrous oxide, Sulfate reduction, Terminal electron acceptors, Upland arable soils

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Exploring Sulfate as an Alternative Electron Acceptor: A Potential Strategy to Mitigate N2O Emissions in Upland Arable Soils. / Lee, Hyun Ho; Kim, Hanbeen; Park, Ye Lim et al.
In: Global change biology, Vol. 31, No. 8, e70428, 13.08.2025.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Lee, HH, Kim, H, Park, YL, Horn, MA, Kim, J, Lee, J, Toyoda, S, Yun, J, Kang, H, Kim, SY, Ahn, J & Hong, CO 2025, 'Exploring Sulfate as an Alternative Electron Acceptor: A Potential Strategy to Mitigate N2O Emissions in Upland Arable Soils.', Global change biology, vol. 31, no. 8, e70428. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70428
Lee, H. H., Kim, H., Park, Y. L., Horn, M. A., Kim, J., Lee, J., Toyoda, S., Yun, J., Kang, H., Kim, S. Y., Ahn, J., & Hong, C. O. (2025). Exploring Sulfate as an Alternative Electron Acceptor: A Potential Strategy to Mitigate N2O Emissions in Upland Arable Soils. Global change biology, 31(8), Article e70428. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70428
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title = "Exploring Sulfate as an Alternative Electron Acceptor: A Potential Strategy to Mitigate N2O Emissions in Upland Arable Soils.",
abstract = "Agricultural activities are a significant source of nitrous oxide (N 2O), accounting for approximately 60% of global emissions, highlighting the urgent need for innovative strategies to mitigate N 2O emissions. Microbes conserve nearly as much energy with nitrate (NO 3 -) as oxygen (O 2) respiration under limited O 2 availability. Thus, microorganisms prioritize NO 3 -, limiting exploration of alternative electron acceptors (EAs) to inhibit N 2O emissions through NO 3 - respiration in upland arable soils. Current approaches remain insufficient, and the interactions between alternative EA reduction and pathways for N 2O emissions remain poorly understood. This study evaluated oxidized iron, manganese, and sulfate as alternative EAs to reduce N 2O emissions, along with the effects of zero-valent metals (ZVMs). Metal sulfates (MSs) significantly minimized N 2O emissions by inhibiting denitrification rather than altering nitrification in microcosms, as supported by isotope mapping and inorganic nitrogen concentrations. Among others, putative complete denitrifiers, N 2O reducers, and sulfate reducers were stimulated, whereas ZVMs stimulated N 2O emissions and 16S rRNA gene abundance. Moreover, the abundance of denitrifier-related genes (nirK, nirS, norB, and nosZ) consistently decreased under MS treatments, while dsrA mRNA abundance significantly increased. Sulfate (SO 4 2-) addition reshaped the soil microbial community by enriching sulfur-cycling taxa-including sulfate-reducing and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria-while suppressing nitrifiers such as Nitrospira, potentially disrupting nitrification-denitrification coupling. Ureibacillus thermosphaerius, harboring genes for denitrification and SO 4 2- reduction, increased under MS treatment. These shifts likely redirected electron flow toward SO 4 2- respiration, reducing NO 3 - utilization and contributing to N 2O mitigation. Field-based manipulation experiments over 2 years demonstrated the feasibility of MSs in upland arable soils, reducing yield-scaled N 2O emissions by 21.5% without compromising crop yields. A systematic literature review and meta-analysis revealed that SO 4 2- application mitigated N 2O emissions by an average of 9%, with over 70% of observations showing a decreasing trend, underscoring its potential as an effective soil amendment for sustainable agriculture. ",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring Sulfate as an Alternative Electron Acceptor

T2 - A Potential Strategy to Mitigate N2O Emissions in Upland Arable Soils.

AU - Lee, Hyun Ho

AU - Kim, Hanbeen

AU - Park, Ye Lim

AU - Horn, Marcus A

AU - Kim, Jeongeun

AU - Lee, Jaehyun

AU - Toyoda, Sakae

AU - Yun, Jeongeun

AU - Kang, Hojeong

AU - Kim, Sang Yoon

AU - Ahn, Jinho

AU - Hong, Chang Oh

N1 - © 2025 The Author(s). Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2025/8/13

Y1 - 2025/8/13

N2 - Agricultural activities are a significant source of nitrous oxide (N 2O), accounting for approximately 60% of global emissions, highlighting the urgent need for innovative strategies to mitigate N 2O emissions. Microbes conserve nearly as much energy with nitrate (NO 3 -) as oxygen (O 2) respiration under limited O 2 availability. Thus, microorganisms prioritize NO 3 -, limiting exploration of alternative electron acceptors (EAs) to inhibit N 2O emissions through NO 3 - respiration in upland arable soils. Current approaches remain insufficient, and the interactions between alternative EA reduction and pathways for N 2O emissions remain poorly understood. This study evaluated oxidized iron, manganese, and sulfate as alternative EAs to reduce N 2O emissions, along with the effects of zero-valent metals (ZVMs). Metal sulfates (MSs) significantly minimized N 2O emissions by inhibiting denitrification rather than altering nitrification in microcosms, as supported by isotope mapping and inorganic nitrogen concentrations. Among others, putative complete denitrifiers, N 2O reducers, and sulfate reducers were stimulated, whereas ZVMs stimulated N 2O emissions and 16S rRNA gene abundance. Moreover, the abundance of denitrifier-related genes (nirK, nirS, norB, and nosZ) consistently decreased under MS treatments, while dsrA mRNA abundance significantly increased. Sulfate (SO 4 2-) addition reshaped the soil microbial community by enriching sulfur-cycling taxa-including sulfate-reducing and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria-while suppressing nitrifiers such as Nitrospira, potentially disrupting nitrification-denitrification coupling. Ureibacillus thermosphaerius, harboring genes for denitrification and SO 4 2- reduction, increased under MS treatment. These shifts likely redirected electron flow toward SO 4 2- respiration, reducing NO 3 - utilization and contributing to N 2O mitigation. Field-based manipulation experiments over 2 years demonstrated the feasibility of MSs in upland arable soils, reducing yield-scaled N 2O emissions by 21.5% without compromising crop yields. A systematic literature review and meta-analysis revealed that SO 4 2- application mitigated N 2O emissions by an average of 9%, with over 70% of observations showing a decreasing trend, underscoring its potential as an effective soil amendment for sustainable agriculture.

AB - Agricultural activities are a significant source of nitrous oxide (N 2O), accounting for approximately 60% of global emissions, highlighting the urgent need for innovative strategies to mitigate N 2O emissions. Microbes conserve nearly as much energy with nitrate (NO 3 -) as oxygen (O 2) respiration under limited O 2 availability. Thus, microorganisms prioritize NO 3 -, limiting exploration of alternative electron acceptors (EAs) to inhibit N 2O emissions through NO 3 - respiration in upland arable soils. Current approaches remain insufficient, and the interactions between alternative EA reduction and pathways for N 2O emissions remain poorly understood. This study evaluated oxidized iron, manganese, and sulfate as alternative EAs to reduce N 2O emissions, along with the effects of zero-valent metals (ZVMs). Metal sulfates (MSs) significantly minimized N 2O emissions by inhibiting denitrification rather than altering nitrification in microcosms, as supported by isotope mapping and inorganic nitrogen concentrations. Among others, putative complete denitrifiers, N 2O reducers, and sulfate reducers were stimulated, whereas ZVMs stimulated N 2O emissions and 16S rRNA gene abundance. Moreover, the abundance of denitrifier-related genes (nirK, nirS, norB, and nosZ) consistently decreased under MS treatments, while dsrA mRNA abundance significantly increased. Sulfate (SO 4 2-) addition reshaped the soil microbial community by enriching sulfur-cycling taxa-including sulfate-reducing and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria-while suppressing nitrifiers such as Nitrospira, potentially disrupting nitrification-denitrification coupling. Ureibacillus thermosphaerius, harboring genes for denitrification and SO 4 2- reduction, increased under MS treatment. These shifts likely redirected electron flow toward SO 4 2- respiration, reducing NO 3 - utilization and contributing to N 2O mitigation. Field-based manipulation experiments over 2 years demonstrated the feasibility of MSs in upland arable soils, reducing yield-scaled N 2O emissions by 21.5% without compromising crop yields. A systematic literature review and meta-analysis revealed that SO 4 2- application mitigated N 2O emissions by an average of 9%, with over 70% of observations showing a decreasing trend, underscoring its potential as an effective soil amendment for sustainable agriculture.

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KW - Nitrous oxide

KW - Sulfate reduction

KW - Terminal electron acceptors

KW - Upland arable soils

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JO - Global change biology

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