Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 7-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov., a moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotroph isolated from the soda lake sediments of a meteorite impact crater.

Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov., a moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotroph isolated from the... A moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotrophic bacterium possessing the ribulose monophosphate pathway for carbon assimilation, designated MPL(T), was isolated from Lonar Lake sediment microcosms that were oxidizing methane for two weeks. The isolate utilized methanol and was an aerobic, Gram-negative, asporogenous, motile, short rod that multiplied by binary fission. The isolate required NaHCO(3) or NaCl for growth and, although not auxotrophic for vitamin B(12), had enhanced growth with vitamin B(12). Optimal growth occurred with 0.5-2% (w/v) NaCl, at 28-30 °C and at pH 9.0-10.0. The cellular fatty acid profile consisted primarily of straight-chain saturated C(16:0) and unsaturated C(16:1)ω7c and C(18:1)ω7c. The major ubiquinone was Q-8. The dominant phospholipids were phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol. Cells accumulated ectoine as the main compatible solute. The DNA G+C content was 50.0 mol%. The isolate exhibited 94.0-95.4% 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity with the type strains of methylotrophs belonging to the genus Methylophaga and 31% DNA-DNA relatedness with the reference strain, Methylophaga alcalica VKM B-2251(T). It is proposed that strain MPL(T) represents a novel species, Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov. (type strain MPL(T)=VKM B-2684(T)=MCC 1002(T)). http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology Pubmed

Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov., a moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotroph isolated from the soda lake sediments of a meteorite impact crater.

International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology , Volume 62 (Pt 7): 6 – Oct 24, 2012

Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov., a moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotroph isolated from the soda lake sediments of a meteorite impact crater.


Abstract

A moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotrophic bacterium possessing the ribulose monophosphate pathway for carbon assimilation, designated MPL(T), was isolated from Lonar Lake sediment microcosms that were oxidizing methane for two weeks. The isolate utilized methanol and was an aerobic, Gram-negative, asporogenous, motile, short rod that multiplied by binary fission. The isolate required NaHCO(3) or NaCl for growth and, although not auxotrophic for vitamin B(12), had enhanced growth with vitamin B(12). Optimal growth occurred with 0.5-2% (w/v) NaCl, at 28-30 °C and at pH 9.0-10.0. The cellular fatty acid profile consisted primarily of straight-chain saturated C(16:0) and unsaturated C(16:1)ω7c and C(18:1)ω7c. The major ubiquinone was Q-8. The dominant phospholipids were phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol. Cells accumulated ectoine as the main compatible solute. The DNA G+C content was 50.0 mol%. The isolate exhibited 94.0-95.4% 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity with the type strains of methylotrophs belonging to the genus Methylophaga and 31% DNA-DNA relatedness with the reference strain, Methylophaga alcalica VKM B-2251(T). It is proposed that strain MPL(T) represents a novel species, Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov. (type strain MPL(T)=VKM B-2684(T)=MCC 1002(T)).

Loading next page...
 
/lp/pubmed/methylophaga-lonarensis-sp-nov-a-moderately-haloalkaliphilic-HB66xeFafM

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

ISSN
1466-5026
eISSN
1466-5034
DOI
10.1099/ijs.0.035089-0
pmid
21890731

Abstract

A moderately haloalkaliphilic methylotrophic bacterium possessing the ribulose monophosphate pathway for carbon assimilation, designated MPL(T), was isolated from Lonar Lake sediment microcosms that were oxidizing methane for two weeks. The isolate utilized methanol and was an aerobic, Gram-negative, asporogenous, motile, short rod that multiplied by binary fission. The isolate required NaHCO(3) or NaCl for growth and, although not auxotrophic for vitamin B(12), had enhanced growth with vitamin B(12). Optimal growth occurred with 0.5-2% (w/v) NaCl, at 28-30 °C and at pH 9.0-10.0. The cellular fatty acid profile consisted primarily of straight-chain saturated C(16:0) and unsaturated C(16:1)ω7c and C(18:1)ω7c. The major ubiquinone was Q-8. The dominant phospholipids were phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol and diphosphatidylglycerol. Cells accumulated ectoine as the main compatible solute. The DNA G+C content was 50.0 mol%. The isolate exhibited 94.0-95.4% 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity with the type strains of methylotrophs belonging to the genus Methylophaga and 31% DNA-DNA relatedness with the reference strain, Methylophaga alcalica VKM B-2251(T). It is proposed that strain MPL(T) represents a novel species, Methylophaga lonarensis sp. nov. (type strain MPL(T)=VKM B-2684(T)=MCC 1002(T)).

Journal

International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiologyPubmed

Published: Oct 24, 2012

There are no references for this article.