23 research outputs found

    SPECIFIC CONTROL OF SALMONELLA IN POULTRY

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    Scientifically based and clinically validated new tools and methods to combat Salmonella infection in poultry, allowing to ensure the safety and health safety products - eggs and poultry meat. The method of selective decontamination involves the use of bivalent bacteriophage that is based on highly selected phages Phagum Salmonella typhimurium and Phagum Salmonella enteritidis, as well as probiotic laktobifadola. The developed tools and methods of selective decontamination followed by immunization with inactivated vaccine associated "Virosalm" allows you to eliminate salmonella infection in poultry

    Sulfidogenesis in hypersaline chloride-sulfate lakes of Kulunda Steppe (Altai, Russia)

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    The activity and culturable diversity of sulfidogens were investigated in anoxic sediments of four hypersaline lakes with pH 7.6-8.2 in the Kulunda Steppe (Altai, Russia). Sulfate reduction rates were low, varying from 0.1 to 6.0 nmol HS−/(cm3 h) with a maximum in the top 10 cm layer. Potential sulfidogenic rates with thiosulfate and sulfur as the e-acceptors were higher than with sulfate and were stimulated by formate, lactate, and acetate. Sulfidogenesis was optimal at salt concentrations below 2 M NaCl. Cultivation at 2 M NaCl resulted in the isolation of several strains of moderately halophilic SRB, but no growth of SRB was observed at 4 M NaCl. At lithotrophic conditions (i.e., with formate or H2 as e-donors), several closely related alkalitolerant strains belonging to the genus Desulfonatronovibrio were isolated. Enrichments at heterotrophic conditions with lactate, propionate, acetate, or butyrate using sulfate or thiosulfate as e-acceptors yielded isolates related to Desulfosalsimonas propionicica, Desulfohalobium utahense, and Desulfocella halophila. Sulfur-reducing enrichments at 2 M NaCl with ethanol produced a member of the genus Halanaerobium, while enrichments at 4 M NaCl with acetate were dominated by archaea, demonstrating for the first time such type of catabolism in haloarchaea

    Comparative Study of Methanogenic Pathways in the Sediments of Thermokarst and Polygenetic Yamal Lakes

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    Comparative study of methanogen diversity and potential activity of different methanogenic pathways in the sediments of young thermokarst and mature polygenetic Yamal lakes was carried out. The hydrogenotrophic pathway of methanogenesis played an important role in methane formation in thermokarst lakes. The acetoclastic and methylotrophic pathways were also revealed there. In a polygenetic lake with a dissolved organic matter content closest to that of the thermokarst lakes, methanogenesis proceeded more intensively, and the relative abundance of methanogens, especially acetoclastic ones, was higher than in thermokarst lakes. The activity of methyl-reducing methanogens was also assumed there. Methanogens of the genera Methanothrix and Methanoregula, as well as representatives of the family Methanomassiliicoccaceae were identified in the sediments of all lakes. Methane-oxidizing bacteria (Methylobacter, Candidatus "Methylomirabilis") and archaea (Ca. "Methanoperedens") were also detected

    Bacterial diversity and activity along a salinity gradient in soda lakes of the Kulunda Steppe (Altai, Russia)

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    Here we describe the diversity and activity of sulfate reducing bacteria along a salinity gradient in four different soda lakes from the Kulunda Steppe (South East Siberia, Russia). For this purpose, a combination of culture-dependent and independent techniques was applied. The general bacterial and SRB diversity were analyzed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) targeting the 16S rDNA gene. DNA was used to detect the microbial populations that were present in the soda lake sediments, whereas ribosomal RNA was used as a template to obtain information on those that were active. Individual DGGE bands were sequenced and a phylogenetic analysis was performed. In addition, the overall activity of SRB was obtained by measuring the sulfate reduction rates (SRR) and their abundance was estimated by serial dilution. Our results showed the presence of minor, but highly active microbial populations, mostly represented by members of the Proteobacteria. Remarkably high SRR were measured at hypersaline conditions (200 g L-1). A relatively high viable count indicated that sulfate reducing bacteria could be highly active in hypersaline soda lakes. Furthermore, the increase of sodium carbonate/bicarbonate seemed to affect the composition of the microbial community in soda lakes, but not the rate of sulfate reduction.BiotechnologyApplied Science

    Bacteria of the sulfur cycle in the sediments of gold mine tailings, Kuznetsk Basin, Russia

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    The number and diversity of culturable microorganisms involved in sulfur oxidation and sulfate reduction were investigated in the oxidized sediments of gold mine tailings, Kuznetsk Basin, Russia. The sediments had a low pH (2.4–2.8), high SO42− content (up to 22 g/l), and high concentrations of dissolved metals. The arsenic content was as high as 1.9 g/l. Bacterial phylogeny in microcosms was investigated by amplification of 16S rRNA gene fragments with subsequent denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). Spore-forming bacteria Desulfosporosinus were the only bacteria revealed for which the capacity for dissimilatory sulfate reduction is known. Strain Desulfosporosinus sp. DB was obtained in pure culture, and it was phylogenetically remote from other cultured and uncultured members of the genus. No sulfate-reducing members of the Deltaproteobacteria were detected. The Firmicutes members were the most numerous phylotypes in the microcosms, including a separate cluster with the similarity to Pelotomaculum not exceeding 94%. Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and A. caldus were found in anaerobic and microaerophilic microcosms. The number of sulfate reducers did not exceed 9.5 × 102 cells/ml

    On the Possibility of Aerobic Methane Production by Pelagic Microbial Communities of the Laptev Sea

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    The taxonomic diversity and metabolic activity of microbial communities in the Laptev Sea water column above and outside the methane seep field were studied. The concentrations of dissolved methane in the water column at both stations were comparable until the depth of the pycnocline (25 m). At this depth, local methane maxima were recorded, with the highest concentration (116 nM CH4) found at the station outside the methane seep field. Results of the 16S rRNA gene sequencing and measurements of the rates of hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis indicated the absence of methanogenesis caused by the methanogenic archaea in the pycnocline and in other horizons of the water column. The 16S rRNA-based analysis of microbial phylogenetic diversity, as well as radiotracer analysis of the rates of primary production (PP), dark CO2 assimilation (DCA), and methane oxidation (MO), indicated the functioning of a diverse community of pelagic microorganisms capable of transforming a wide range of organic compounds under oligotrophic conditions of the Arctic basin. Hydrochemical prerequisites and possible microbial agents of aerobic methane production via demethylation of methylphosphonate and decomposition of dimethylsulfoniopropionate using dissolved organic matter synthesized in the PP, DCA, and MO processes are discussed
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