37 research outputs found

    Distribution, abundance and diversity of the extremely halophilic bacterium Salinibacter ruber

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    Since its discovery in 1998, representatives of the extremely halophilic bacterium Salinibacter ruber have been found in many hypersaline environments across the world, including coastal and solar salterns and solar lakes. Here, we review the available information about the distribution, abundance and diversity of this member of the Bacteroidetes

    Microbial Community Composition of Wadden Sea Sediments as Revealed by Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization

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    The microbial community composition of Wadden Sea sediments of the German North Sea coast was investigated by in situ hybridization with group-specific fluorescently labeled, rRNA-targeted oligonucleotides. A large fraction (up to 73%) of the DAPI (4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole)-stained cells hybridized with the bacterial probes. Nearly 45% of the total cells could be further identified as belonging to known phyla. Members of the Cytophaga-Flavobacterium cluster were most abundant in all layers, followed by the sulfate-reducing bacteria

    Anaerobic Mineralization of Quaternary Carbon Atoms: Isolation of Denitrifying Bacteria on Dimethylmalonate

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    The microbial capacity to degrade simple organic compounds with quaternary carbon atoms was demonstrated by enrichment and isolation of five denitrifying strains on dimethylmalonate as the sole electron donor and carbon source. Quantitative growth experiments showed a complete mineralization of dimethylmalonate. According to phylogenetic analysis of the complete 16S rRNA genes, two strains isolated from activated sewage sludge were related to the genus Paracoccus within the α-Proteobacteria (98.0 and 98.2% 16S rRNA gene similarity to Paracoccus denitrificans(T)), and three strains isolated from freshwater ditches were affiliated with the β-Proteobacteria (97.4 and 98.3% 16S rRNA gene similarity to Herbaspirillum seropedicae(T) and Acidovorax facilis(T), respectively). Most-probable-number determinations for denitrifying populations in sewage sludge yielded 4.6 × 10(4) dimethylmalonate-utilizing cells ml(−1), representing up to 0.4% of the total culturable nitrate-reducing population

    Phylogeny and in situ identification of magnetotactic bacteria

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    This chapter contains sections titled: Microbial Diversity and the Problem of Culturability The rRNA Approach to Microbial Ecology and Evolution Application of the rRNA Approach to Magnetotactic Bacteria The Genus Magnetospirillum Encompassing Culturable Magnetotactic Bacteria Phylogenetic Diversity and In situ Identification of Uncultured Magnetotactic Cocci from Lake Chiemsee The Magnetotactic Bacteria are Polyphyletic with Respect to their 16S rRNA “Magnetobacterium bavaricum” Further Diversity of Magnetotactic Bacteria A Current View of the Phylogeny of Magnetotactic Bacteri

    Microbial Diversity in Maras Salterns, a Hypersaline Environment in the Peruvian Andes

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    Maras salterns are located 3,380 m above sea level in the Peruvian Andes. These salterns consist of more than 3,000 little ponds which are not interconnected and act as crystallizers where salt precipitates. These ponds are fed by hypersaline spring water rich in sodium and chloride. The microbiota inhabiting these salterns was examined by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), 16S rRNA gene clone library analysis, and cultivation techniques. The total counts per milliliter in the ponds were around 2 × 10(6) to 3 × 10(6) cells/ml, while the spring water contained less than 100 cells/ml and did not yield any detectable FISH signal. The microbiota inhabiting the ponds was dominated (80 to 86% of the total counts) by Archaea, while Bacteria accounted for 10 to 13% of the 4′,6′-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) counts. A total of 239 16S rRNA gene clones were analyzed (132 Archaea clones and 107 Bacteria clones). According to the clone libraries, the archaeal assemblage was dominated by microorganisms related to the cosmopolitan square archaeon “Haloquadra walsbyi,” although a substantial number of the sequences in the libraries (31% of the 16S rRNA gene archaeal clones) were related to Halobacterium sp., which is not normally found in clone libraries from solar salterns. All the bacterial clones were closely related to each other and to the γ-proteobacterium “Pseudomonas halophila” DSM 3050. FISH analysis with a probe specific for this bacterial assemblage revealed that it accounted for 69 to 76% of the total bacterial counts detected with a Bacteria-specific probe. When pond water was used to inoculate solid media containing 25% total salts, both extremely halophilic Archaea and Bacteria were isolated. Archaeal isolates were not related to the isolates in clone libraries, although several bacterial isolates were very closely related to the “P. halophila” cluster found in the libraries. As observed for other hypersaline environments, extremely halophilic bacteria that had ecological relevance seemed to be easier to culture than their archaeal counterparts
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