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1.
Coimmobilization of the freshwater microalga Chlorella vulgaris and the plant-growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense in small alginate beads resulted in a significantly increased growth of the microalga. Dry and fresh weight, total number of cells, size of the microalgal clusters (colonies) within the bead, number of microalgal cells per cluster, and the levels of microalgal pigments significantly increased. Light microscopy revealed that both microorganisms colonized the same cavities inside the beads, though the microalgae tended to concentrate in the more aerated periphery while the bacteria colonized the entire bead. The effect of indole-3-acetic acid addition to microalgal culture prior to immobilization of microorganisms in alginate beads partially imitated the effect of A. brasilense. We propose that coimmobilization of microalgae and plant-growth-promoting bacteria is an effective means of increasing microalgal populations within confined environments.  相似文献   

2.
In an agroindustrial wastewater pond, a naturally occurring unicellular microalga, Chlorella vulgaris, was closely associated with the terrestrial plant-associative N2-fixing bacterium Phyllobacterium myrsinacearum. When the two microorganisms were artificially coimmobilized in alginate beads, they shared the same internal bead cavities, and the production of five microalgal pigments increased, but there were no effects on the number of the cells or the biomass of the microalga. The association, however, reduces the ability of C. vulgaris to remove ammonium ions and phosphorus from water. The bacterium produced nitrate from ammonium in synthetic wastewater with or without the presence of the microalga, and fixed nitrogen in two culture media. Our results suggest that interactions between microalgae and associative bacteria should be considered when cultivating microalgae for wastewater treatment.  相似文献   

3.
Cell‐cell interaction in the eukaryote‐prokaryote model of the unicellular, freshwater microalga Chlorella vulgaris Beij. and the plant growth‐promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense, when jointly immobilized in small polymer alginate beads, was evaluated by quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) combined with SEM. This step revealed significant changes, with an increase in the populations of both partners, cluster (mixed colonies) mode of colonization of the bead by the two microorganisms, increase in the size of microalgae‐bacterial clusters, movement of the motile bacteria cells toward the immotile microalgae cells within solid matrix, and formation of firm structures among the bacteria, microalgae cells, and the inert matrix that creates a biofilm. This biofilm was sufficiently strong to keep the two species attached to each other, even after eliminating the alginate support. This study showed that the common structural phenotypic interaction of Azospirillum with roots of higher plants, via fibrils and sheath material, is also formed and maintained during the interaction of this bacterium with the surface of rootless single‐cell microalgae.  相似文献   

4.
When the freshwater microalga Chlorella sorokiniana and the plant growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense were deployed as free suspensions in unsterile, municipal wastewater for tertiary wastewater treatment, their population was significantly lower compared with their populations in sterile wastewater. At the same time, the numbers of natural microfauna and wastewater bacteria increased. Immobilization of C. sorokiniana and A. brasilense in small (2–4 mm in diameter), polymer Ca-alginate beads significantly enhanced their populations when these beads were suspended in normal wastewater. All microbial populations within and on the surface of the beads were evaluated by quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization combined with scanning electron microscopy and direct measurements. Submerging immobilizing beads in wastewater created the following sequence of events: (a) a biofilm composed of wastewater bacteria and A. brasilense was created on the surface of the beads, (b) the bead inhibited penetration of outside organisms into the beads, (c) the bead inhibited liberation of the immobilized microorganisms into the wastewater, and (d) permitted an uninterrupted reduction of ammonium and phosphorus from the wastewater. This study demonstrated that wastewater microbial populations are responsible for decreasing populations of biological agents used for wastewater treatment and immobilization in alginate beads provided a protective environment for these agents to carry out uninterrupted tertiary wastewater treatment.  相似文献   

5.
Two plant-growth-promoting bacteria, Azospirillum brasilense Cd and Pseudomonas fluorescens 313, immobilized in 1983 in two types of alginate-bead inoculant (with and without skim-milk supplement) and later dried and stored at ambient temperature for 14 years, were recovered in 1996. The population in each type of bead had decreased, yet significant numbers survived (105–106 cfu/g beads). Population numbers depended on the bead type and the three independent bacterial counting methods: the conventional plate-count method, indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and the limited-enrichment technique. Both bacterial species retained several of their original physiological features. When inoculated onto wheat plants, both species colonized and produced plant-growth effects equal to those of the contemporary strain from a culture collection or to their own 1983 records. This study showed that bacteria can survive in alginate inoculant over long periods. Received: 1 May 1998 / Received revision: 24 August 1998 / Accepted: 3 September 1998  相似文献   

6.
Microalgae immobilization in alginate matrixes has been recently used to perform in situ experiments. However, the susceptibility of alginate matrixes to cation chelating agents and to antigelling cations, which can cause bead disruption or dissolution, is a major limitation for in situ exposures in estuarine and marine systems. The ultimate goal of this study was to produce alginate beads stable in seawater and suited for Phaeodactylum tricornutum growth. For this, different concentrations of alginate isolated from Macrocystis pyrifera (1.5, 1.9 and 2.3% [w/v]) and Laminaria hyperborea (4.0, 4.9 and 5.8% [w/v]), two concentrations of the hardening cations calcium and strontium (2.0 and 4.0% [w/v]), and the use of the polycation chitosan were investigated. Only beads found to be more stable after 16 days of exposure in seawater were inoculated with the microalga. P. tricornutum immobilized in beads prepared from 5.8% L. hyperborea alginate and in all beads in which a chitosan hardening treatment was applied showed a weak microalgal growth. Beads prepared using 4.9% of L. hyperborea alginate and a 4% (w/v) strontium solution were found to be the most stable and the most suitable for microalgal growth, and were exposed in the field, under natural fluctuating conditions of light and temperature. In situ growth rates of immobilized P. tricornutum cells demonstrated the potential of these beads for future use in in situ experiments in estuarine and marine systems.  相似文献   

7.
Three strains of the freshwater microalgae used for wastewater treatment, Chlorella vulgaris and Chlorella sorokiniana co-immobilized separately in alginate beads with the microalgae-growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense Cd, resulted in significant changes in microalgal-population size, cell size, cell cytology, pigment, lipid content, and the variety of fatty acids produced in comparison with microalgae immobilized in alginate without the bacterium. Cells of C. vulgaris UTEX 2714 did not change in size, but the population size within the beads significantly increased. On the other hand, C. vulgaris UTEX 395 cells grew 62% larger, but their numbers did not increase. The population of C. sorokiniana UTEX 1602 increased, but not their cell size. The content of pigments chlorophyll a and b, lutein, and violoaxanthin increased in all microalgal species. The lipid content also significantly increased in all three strains, and the number of different fatty acids in the microalgae increased from four to eight. This study indicates that the microalgae-growth-promoting bacterium induced significant changes in the metabolism of the microalgae.  相似文献   

8.
The plant-growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense is able to associate with the microalgae Chlorella sorokiniana. Attachment of A. brasilense increases the metabolic performances of the microalgae. Recent genome analyses have revealed that the A. brasilense Az39 genome contains two complete sets of genes encoding type VI secretion systems (T6SS), including the T6SS1 that is induced by the indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) phytohormone. The T6SS is a multiprotein machine, widespread in Gram-negative bacteria, that delivers protein effectors in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Here we show that the A. brasilense T6SS is required for Chlorella-Azospirillum synthetic mutualism. Our data demonstrate that the T6SS is an important determinant to promote production of lipids, carbohydrates and photosynthetic pigments by the microalgae. We further show that this is likely due to the role of the T6SS during the attachment stage and for the production of IAA phytohormones. Finally, we demonstrate that the A. brasilense T6SS provides antagonistic activities against a number of plant pathogens such as Agrobacterium, Pectobacterium, Dickeya and Ralstonia species in vitro, suggesting that, in addition to promoting growth, A. brasilense might confer T6SS-dependent bio-control protection to microalgae and plants against bacterial pathogens.  相似文献   

9.
Thiamine release during synthetic mutualism between Chlorella sorokiniana co-immobilized in alginate beads with the microalgae growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense was measured under stress conditions of pH, light intensity, and nitrogen starvation in short-term experiments. Thiamine release in the co-immobilized treatment was significantly higher at acidic pH compared to thiamine released by either microorganism alone. Under slightly alkaline pH, C. sorokiniana released the highest amount of thiamine. At stressful pH 6, the co-immobilized treatment released a higher quantity of thiamine than the sum of thiamine released by either microorganisms when immobilized separately. Release of thiamine by C. sorokiniana alone or co-immobilized was light intensity dependent; with higher the light intensity, more thiamine was released. Extreme light intensity negatively affected growth of the microalgae and release of thiamine. Nitrogen starvation during the first 24 h of culturing negatively affected release of thiamine by both microorganisms, where C. sorokiniana was more severely affected. Partial or continuous nitrogen starvation had similar negative effects on C. sorokiniana, but co-immobilization improved thiamine release. These results indicate that thiamine is released during synthetic mutualism between C. sorokiniana and A. brasilense, and this happens specifically during the alleviation of pH stress in the microalgae.  相似文献   

10.
Alginate extracted from the macroalgae Sargassum sinicola was used as the raw material for co-immobilization of the microalgae Chlorella sorokiniana and growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense for wastewater treatment and as an inoculant carrier of A. brasilense for plant growth promotion. The composition, structure, viscosity, color, and phenolic compound content of the alginate were analyzed and compared with commercially available alginate produced from the macroalgae Macrocystis pyrifera. From 1H NMR analysis of alginate, S. sinicola was found to have more guluronic acid (F G=0.64) than it had mannuronic acid (F M=0.38) and had a viscosity of 13.5 m Pa s compared to 50 m Pa s for M. pyrifera. The S. sinicola alginate had dark brown color, reducing light penetration, with more phenolic compounds than M. pyrifera alginate. Nonetheless, growth of C. sorokiniana and A. brasilense in S. sinicola alginate was not significantly different than the growth in M. pyrifera alginate beads. Nutrient removal from wastewater by the co-immobilized microorganisms was similar for both types of alginate beads, and so was the growth enhancement of tomato plants inoculated with microbeads containing A. brasilense. This study shows the potential use of S. sinicola alginate as a raw material for cell immobilization for wastewater treatment and plant growth promotion.  相似文献   

11.
Heterotrophic growth of microalgae presents significant economic advantages over the more common autotrophic cultivation. The efficiency of growth and nitrogen, phosphorus, and glucose uptake from synthetic wastewater was compared under heterotrophic, autotrophic, and mixotrophic regimes of Chlorella vulgaris Beij. immobilized in alginate beads, either alone or with the bacterium Azospirillum brasilense. Heterotrophic cultivation of C. vulgaris growing alone was superior to autotrophic cultivation. The added bacteria enhanced growth only under autotrophic and mixotrophic cultivations. Uptake of ammonium by the culture, yield of cells per ammonium unit, and total volumetric productivity of the culture were the highest under heterotrophic conditions when the microalga grew without the bacterium. Uptake of phosphate was higher under autotrophic conditions and similar under the other two regimes. Positive influence of the addition of A. brasilense was found only when light was supplied (autotrophic and mixotrophic), where affinity to phosphate and yield per phosphate unit were the highest under heterotrophic conditions. The pH of the culture was significantly reduced in all regimes where glucose was consumed, similarly in heterotrophic and mixotrophic cultures. It was concluded that the heterotrophic regime, using glucose, is superior to autotrophic and mixotrophic regimes for the uptake of ammonium and phosphate. Addition of A. brasilense positively affects the nutrient uptake only in the two regimes supplied with light.  相似文献   

12.
固定化微藻对虾池弧菌数量动态的影响   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
引入固定化波吉卵囊藻(Oocystis borgei)和微绿球藻(Nannochloris oculata)于凡纳对虾(Litop Penaeus vannamei)养殖环境中,检测水体、对虾胃和后肠中弧菌的数量变化,研究固定化微藻对虾池弧数量动态影响。结果表明:波吉卵囊藻培养液中9d后不能检测出弧菌,微绿球藻培养液中15d后不能检测出弧菌。引入固定化波吉卵囊藻和微绿球藻的褐藻胶藻珠能抑制弧菌的生长,实验组养殖水体、对虾胃和后肠中弧菌的数量都比对照组低;抑制效果是固定化波吉卵囊藻和微绿球藻混合固定化波吉卵囊藻固定化微绿球藻;试验后期实验组弧菌的数量明显低于试验前期。试验期间固定化波吉卵囊藻和微绿球藻的生物量分别增加了约10倍和17倍,证明它们的生理活性不会因固定化而受干扰。因此,固定化微藻可应用于虾池微生态调控防病。    相似文献   

13.
Chlorella vulgaris, a microalga often used in wastewater treatment, was coimmobilized and coincubated either with the plant growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense, or with its natural associative bacterium Phyllobacterium myrsinacearum, in alginate beads designed for advanced wastewater treatment. Interactions between the microalga and each of the bacterial species were followed using transmission electron microscopy for 10 days. Initially, most of the small cavities within the beads were colonized by microcolonies of only one microorganism, regardless of the bacterial species cocultured with the microalga. Subsequently, the bacterial and microalgal microcolonies merged to form large, mixed colonies within the cavities. At this stage, the effect of bacterial association with the microalga differed depending on the bacterium present. Though the microalga entered a senescence phase in the presence of P. myrsinacearum, it remained in a growth phase in the presence of A. brasilense. This study suggests that there are commensal interactions between the microalga and the two plant associative bacteria, and that with time the bacterial species determined whether the outcome for the microalga is senescence or continuous multiplication.  相似文献   

14.
This study examined the co-immobilization of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus with the plant growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense in alginate beads and its potential application for the removal of phosphorus from aquaculture wastewater. Co-immobilization of both microorganisms significantly increased the cell density of S. elongatus (2852.5?×?104 cells mL?1) compared with that of immobilization of cyanobacteria alone (1325.2?×?104 cells mL?1). Chlorophyll a content was similar in co-immobilized (11.1?±?3.5 pg cell?1) and immobilized S. elongatus (14.5?±?4.9 pg cell?1). Azospirillum brasilense showed continuous growth until day 2, after which its cell concentration declined until the end of the assay. Co-immobilized S. elongatus removed more phosphorus (44.8 %) than immobilized cyanobacteria cells alone (32.0 %). In conclusion, phosphate removal was greater with free cells of S. elongatus but overlapped with the values that were obtained with the treatment of co-immobilization of cells. Our results demonstrate that A. brasilense enhances the growth of S. elongatus and improves its removal of phosphorus when they are co-immobilized in alginate beads compared with only immobilization of cyanobacteria cells alone.  相似文献   

15.
Unicellular microalgae generally grow in the presence of bacteria, particularly when they are farmed massively. This study analyzes the bacteria associated with mass culture of Botryococcus braunii: both the planktonic bacteria in the water column and those forming biofilms adhered to the surface of the microalgal cells (∼107–108 culturable cells per gram microalgae). Furthermore, we identified the culturable bacteria forming a biofilm in the microalgal cells by 16S rDNA sequencing. At least eight different culturable species of bacteria were detected in the biofilm and were evaluated for the presence of quorum-sensing signals in these bacteria. Few studies have considered the implications of this phenomenon as regards the interaction between bacteria and microalgae. Production of C4-AHL and C6-AHL were detected in two species, Pseudomonas sp. and Rhizobium sp., which are present in the bacterial biofilm associated with B. braunii. This type of signal was not detected in the planktonic bacteria isolated from the water. We also noted that the bacterium, Rhizobium sp., acted as a probiotic bacterium and significantly encouraged the growth of B. braunii. A direct application of these beneficial bacteria associated with B. braunii could be, to use them like inoculants for large-scale microalgal cultures. They could optimize biomass production by enhancing growth, particularly in this microalga that has a low growth rate.  相似文献   

16.
Because microorganisms frequently live in an immobilized state in natural habitats, a cell-confined system was used to study bacterial conjugation. Two Pseudomonas putida strains were introduced together within calcium alginate gels. Different alginate beads were designed by varying the polysaccharide and the gelation solution concentrations. Microscopic examinations showed that 2% gels were quite homogeneous, but that 1.5% and 1% gels were rather heterogeneous. In these two last cases, shaft-shaped macrostructures were present. They were colonized during the culture by great densities of highly motile bacteria. Gene transfers due to conjugation were investigated in such alginate gel bead microcosms, in batch and continuous cultures. High-initial transfer frequencies were detected whatever the gel, but no conjugation events seemed to occur with further growth in the beads. Transfer frequency values were roughly similar in the different tested systems. Alginate gels used as artificial microcosms may be valuable to study the effect of cell microenvironment on genetic transfers in complex systems.  相似文献   

17.
An artificial biofilm system consisting of Pseudomonas aeruginosa entrapped in alginate and agarose beads was used to demonstrate transport limitation of the rate of disinfection of entrapped bacteria by chlorine. Alginate gel beads with or without entrapped bacteria consumed chlorine. The specific rate of chlorine consumption increased with increasing cell loading in the gel beads and decreased with increasing bead radius. The value of an observable modulus comparing the rates of reaction and diffusion ranged from less than 0.1 to 8 depending on the bead radius and cell density. The observable modulus was largest for large (3-mm-diameter) beads with high cell loading (1.8 x 10(9) cfu/cm(3)) and smallest for small beads (0.5 mm diameter) with no cells added. A chlorine microelectrode was used to measure chlorine concentration profiles in agarose beads (3.0 mm diameter). Chlorine fully penetrated cell-free agarose beads rapidly; the concentration of chlorine at the bead center reached 50% of the bulk concentration within approximately 10 min after immersion in chlorine solution. When alginate and bacteria were incorporated into an agarose bead, pronounced chlorine concentration gradients persisted within the gel bead. Chlorine did gradually penetrate the bead, but at a greatly retarded rate; the time to reach 50% of the bulk concentration at the bead center was approximately 46 h. The overall rate of disinfection of entrapped bacteria was strongly dependent on cell density and bead radius. Small beads with low initial cell loading (0.5 mm diameter, 1.1 x 10(7) cfu/cm(3)) experienced rapid killing; viable cells could not be detected (<1.6 x 10(5) cfu/cm(3)) after 15 min of treatment in 2.5 mg/L chlorine. In contrast, the number of viable cells in larger beads with a higher initial cell density (3.0 mm diameter, 2.2 x 10(9) cfu/cm(3)) decreased only about 20% after 6 h of treatment in the same solution. Spatially nonuniform killing of bacteria within the beads was demonstrated by measuring the transient release of viable cells during dissolution of the beads. Bacteria were killed preferentially near the bead surface. Experimental results were consistent with transport limitation of the penetration of chlorine into the artificial biofilm arising from a reaction-diffusion interaction. The methods reported here provide tools for diagnosing the mechanism of biofilm resistance to reactive antimicrobial agents in such applications as the treatment of drinking and cooling waters. (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Growth of and the capacity to take up nitrogen in the freshwater microalgae Chlorella vulgaris were studied while varying the concentrations of ammonium and nitrate, the pH and the source of carbon in a synthetic wastewater growth medium when co-immobilized in alginate beads with the microalgae growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense. Analyses of 29 independent experiments showed that co-immobilization of the microalgae with A. brasilense could result in two independent phenomena directly affected by cultivation factors, such as nitrogen species, pH and presence of a carbon source. First, growth of the microalgal population increased without an increase in the capacity of the single cells to take up nitrogen, or second, the capacity of cells to take up nitrogen increased without an increase of the total microalgal population. These phenomena were dependent on the population density of the microalgae, which was in turn affected by cultivation factors. This supports the conclusion that the size of the microalgal population controls the uptake of nitrogen in C. vulgaris cells - the higher the population (regardless the experimental parameters), the less nitrogen each cell takes up.  相似文献   

19.
In synthetic wastewater, growth and phosphorus absorption by two species of microalgae, Chlorella sorokiniana and Chlorella vulgaris, and in domestic wastewater by C. sorokiniana significantly enhanced after a starvation period of 3 days in saline solution, combined with co-immobilization with the microalgae growth-promoting bacterium (MGPB) Azospirillum brasilense Cd in alginate beads. Starvation of 5 days negatively affected the subsequent growth of C. vulgaris, but not of C. sorokiniana in fresh wastewater. Starvation of immobilized cultures of microalgae separately or microalgae with bacteria, followed by returning the immobilized cultures to the same wastewater did not enhance phosphorus absorption. However, a starvation period followed by subsequent submersion of the cultures in fresh wastewater allowed the continuation of phosphorus absorption. The best phosphorus removal treatment from a batch of synthetic or domestic wastewater was with tandem treatments of wastewater treatment with pre-starved, co-immobilized microalgae and replacement of this culture, after one cycle of phosphorus removal, with a new, similarly starved culture. This combination treatment with two cultures was capable of removing up to 72% of phosphorus from the wastewater. There was a direct correlation between the initial load of phosphorus in the domestic wastewater and the efficiency level of removal, being highest at higher phosphorus loads in co-immobilized cultures. This occurred for both immobilized and co-immobilized cultures. Further, the results showed that negative effects of starving the microalgae were mitigated by the application of the MGPB A. brasilense Cd. This is the first report of this capacity in Azospirillum sp. on a single-cell plant. This study showed that starvation periods, combined with co-immobilization with MGPB, have synergistic effects on absorption of phosphorus from wastewater and merits consideration in designing future biological treatments of wastewater.  相似文献   

20.
Involvement of indole‐3‐acetic acid (IAA), produced by the microalgae‐growth‐promoting bacteria Azospirillum brasilens and A. lipoferum, in promoting growth of the microalga Chlorella vulgaris Beij. was studied. Four wildtype strains of Azospirillum and their IAA‐deficient mutants were co‐immobilized with C. vulgaris in alginate beads. Cultures were grown in synthetic growth medium supplemented with tryptophan. Growth promotion of microalgae and production of exogenous IAA by Azospirillum spp. were monitored. All wildtype Azospirillum spp. produced significant but varying amounts of IAA, while their mutant forms produced significantly less. The results demonstrated a significant growth promotion in Chlorella cultures when immobilized with the four wildtype strains of Azospirillum, while very low or no enhanced growth was induced by the four IAA‐deficient mutants, compared to when C. vulgaris is immobilized alone. A complementation experiment, where an IAA‐attenuated mutant (A. brasilense SpM7918) was supplemented with IAA produced by its parental wildtype strain (A. brasilense Sp6), restored growth promotion in the microalgae‐mutant culture.  相似文献   

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