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1.
We have developed a new method based on the sublimation of adenine from Escherichia coli to estimate bacterial cell counts in natural samples. To demonstrate this technique, several types of natural samples, including beach sand, seawater, deep-sea sediment, and two soil samples from the Atacama Desert, were heated to a temperature of 500 degrees C for several seconds under reduced pressure. The sublimate was collected on a cold finger, and the amount of adenine released from the samples was then determined by high-performance liquid chromatography with UV absorbance detection. Based on the total amount of adenine recovered from DNA and RNA in these samples, we estimated bacterial cell counts ranging from approximately 10(5) to 10(9) E. coli cell equivalents per gram. For most of these samples, the sublimation-based cell counts were in agreement with total bacterial counts obtained by traditional DAPI (4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining.  相似文献   

2.
Cycling primed in situ amplification-fluorescent in situ hybridization (CPRINS-FISH) was developed to recognize individual genes in a single bacterial cell. In CPRINS, the amplicon was long single-stranded DNA and thus retained within the permeabilized microbial cells. FISH with a multiply labeled fluorescent probe set enabled significant reduction in nonspecific background while maintaining high fluorescence signals of target bacteria. The ampicillin resistance gene in Escherichia coli, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene in different gram-negative strains, and RNA polymerase sigma factor (rpoD) gene in Aeromonas spp. could be detected under identical permeabilization conditions. After concentration of environmental freshwater samples onto polycarbonate filters and subsequent coating of filters in gelatin, no decrease in bacterial cell numbers was observed with extensive permeabilization. The detection rates of bacterioplankton in river and pond water samples by CPRINS-FISH with a universal 16S rRNA gene primer and probe set ranged from 65 to 76% of total cell counts (mean, 71%). The concentrations of cells detected by CPRINS-FISH targeting of the rpoD genes of Aeromonas sobria and A. hydrophila in the water samples varied between 2.1 × 103 and 9.0 × 103 cells ml−1 and between undetectable and 5.1 × 102 cells ml−1, respectively. These results demonstrate that CPRINS-FISH provides a high sensitivity for microscopic detection of bacteria carrying a specific gene in natural aquatic samples.  相似文献   

3.
1. The phosphorus content per infective particle of isolated bacteriophage T2 has been redetermined. It does not exceed 1.8 to 2.2 x 10–11 µg. The equivalent amount of DNA has been defined in terms of several analytical methods and taken as a unit of measurement of intrabacterial DNA. 2. The DNA of E. coli contains guanine, adenine, cytosine, and thymine in approximately equal amounts, but no hydroxymethylcytosine. One bacterial cell contains 40 to 150 units of DNA, depending on the conditions of growth and the method of measurement. 3. The DNA of phage T2 (one unit per particle by definition) contains guanine, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine, and relatively large amounts of adenine and thymine, but no cytosine. 4. Infected bacteria contain DNA of a composition that varies systematically during the course of viral growth. At all times it resembles a mixture of bacterial and viral DNA. 5. The characteristic bacterial DNA is decomposed after infection, measuring about one-third its initial amount at 20 minutes. The characteristic viral DNA increases in amount, after a short delay, reaching a level of 100 to 400 units per bacterium 30 minutes after infection. At 10 minutes after infection, the two kinds of DNA are approximately equal in amount. 6. The characteristic viral DNA present in infected cells exists in two forms, one consisting of infective particles and one not. The portion not contained in infective particles builds up to 40 to 80 units per cell during the first 10 minutes after infection and afterwards remains roughly constant in amount. Infective particles begin to appear at 10 minutes and account for all or most of the increase thereafter.  相似文献   

4.
Analysis of 100 bagged lettuce and spinach samples showed mean total bacterial counts of 7.0 log10 CFU/g and a broad range of <4 to 8.3 log10 CFU/g. Most probable numbers (MPN) of ≥11,000 /g coliforms were found in 55 samples, and generic Escherichia coli bacteria were detected in 16 samples, but no E. coli count exceeded 10 MPN/g.  相似文献   

5.
Microbial Flora of Pond-Reared Brown Shrimp (Penaeus aztecus)   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Agar plate counts and microbial types are reported for brown shrimp reared in 2-acre natural marshland and in 0.5-acre artificial ponds during June to October 1970. Bacterial counts of pond-reared shrimp ranged from 5 × 104 to 5.5 × 106 per g. At final harvest in October, bacterial counts ranged from 2 × 105 to 5.5 × 106 per g. In marsh ponds, bacterial counts of shrimp and pond water were lowest in August when both water temperature and salinity were high. Coryneform bacteria and to a lesser extent Vibrio were the predominant isolates from fresh pond shrimp. Shrimp stored at 3 to 5 C for 7 days were acceptable as judged by appearance and odor. Between 7 and 14 days of refrigerated storage, bacterial counts increased sharply and about 50% of the samples became unacceptable. Refrigerated storage of pond shrimp caused increases in coryneform bacteria and micrococci and decreases in Vibrio, Flavobacterium, Moraxella, and Bacillus species. Pseudomonas species were not significant in fresh or stored pond shrimp. The microbial flora of pond water usually was dominated by coryneform bacteria, Flavobacterium, Moraxella, and Bacillus species.  相似文献   

6.
A high biomasses of Cladophora, a filamentous green alga, is found mainly during the summer along the shores of Lake Michigan. In this study, the abundance and persistence of the fecal indicator bacterium Escherichia coli and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) on Cladophora mats collected at Lake Michigan beaches were evaluated using both culture-based and molecular analyses. Additionally, 16S rRNA gene cloning and sequencing were used to examine the bacterial community composition. Overall, E. coli was detected in all 63 samples obtained from 11 sites, and the average levels at most beaches ranged from 2,700 CFU/100 g (wet weight) of Cladophora to 7,500 CFU/100 g of Cladophora. However, three beaches were found to have site average E. coli densities of 12,800, 21,130, and 27,950 CFU/100 g of Cladophora. The E. coli levels in the lake water collected at the same time from these three sites were less than the recommended U.S. Environmental Protection Agency limit, 235 CFU/100 ml. E. coli also persisted on Cladophora mats in microcosms at room temperature for more than 7 days, and in some experiments it persisted for as long as 28 days. The SRB densities on Cladophora mats were relatively high, ranging from 4.4 × 106 cells/g (6.64 log CFU/g) to 5.73 × 106 cells/g (6.76 log CFU/g) and accounting for between 20% and 27% of the total bacterial counts. Partial sequences of the 16S rRNA gene clones revealed a phylogenetically diverse community, in which the Cytophaga-Flavobacterium-Bacteroides cluster and the low-G+C-content gram-positive bacteria were the dominant organisms, accounting for 40% and 12.8%, respectively, of the total clone library. These results further reveal the potential public health and ecological significance of Cladophora mats that are commonly found along the shoreline of Lake Michigan, especially with regard to the potential to harbor microorganisms associated with fecal pollution and odor-causing bacteria.  相似文献   

7.
Aims: To determine the counts and/or prevalence in fresh bovine faeces of Escherichia coli, enterococci, Campylobacter, Salmonella, shiga toxin‐producing E. coli (STEC), Giardia and Cryptosporidium, as inputs to numerical models designed to estimate microbial loadings on pasture grazed by cattle in New Zealand. Methods and Results: In each season over one year, samples of freshly deposited bovine faeces were collected from four New Zealand dairy farms (n = 155), and enumerated for E. coli, enterococci, Campylobacter, Giardia and Cryptosporidium. They were also tested for the presence of Salmonella and STEC. The overall median bacterial counts (g?1 wet weight) were E. coli– 5·9 × 106; enterococci – 1·3 × 104; Campylobacter– 3·9 × 105. All counts were highly variable within and between samplings, and few seasonal or regional patterns emerged. However, mean Campylobacter counts were consistently higher in spring. No Salmonella spp. was detected, and only two samples were positive for STEC. Cryptosporidium and Giardia were isolated from 5·2% and 4·5% of the samples, respectively, yielding low numbers of (oo)cysts (1–25 g?1 and 1–17 g?1, respectively). Conclusions: Fresh bovine faeces are a significant source of E. coli, enterococci and Campylobacter on New Zealand pastures, although numbers are likely to vary markedly between faecal samples. Significance and Impact of the Study: The study provides the first significant set of indicator and pathogen counts for one of the largest sources of faecal contamination of natural waters in New Zealand, and will be used to model these inputs.  相似文献   

8.
Rates of primary and bacterial production in Little Crooked Lake were calculated from the rates of incorporation of H14CO3 and [methyl-3H]thymidine, respectively. Growth rates of bacteria in diluted natural samples were determined for epilimnetic and metalimnetic bacterial populations during the summers of 1982 and 1983. Exponential growth was observed in these diluted samples, with increases in cell numbers of 30 to 250%. No lag was observed in bacterial growth in 14 of 16 experiments. Correlation of bacterial growth rates to corresponding rates of thymidine incorporation by natural samples produced a conversion factor of 2.2 × 1018 cells produced per mole of thymidine incorporated. The mass of the average bacterial cell in the lake was 1.40 × 10−14 ± 0.05 × 10−14 g of C cell−1. Doubling times of natural bacteria calculated from thymidine incorporation rates and in situ cell numbers ranged from 0.35 to 12.00 days (median, 1.50 days). Bacterial production amounted to 66.7 g of C m−2 from April through September, accounting for 29.4% of total (primary plus bacterial) production during this period. The vertical and seasonal distribution of bacterial production in Little Crooked Lake was strongly influenced by the distribution of primary production. From April through September 1983, the depth of maximum bacterial production rates in the water column was related to the depth of high rates of primary production. On a seasonal basis, primary production increased steadily from May through September, and bacterial production increased from May through August and then decreased in September.  相似文献   

9.
In this study, we developed a microplate sandwich analysis of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus bacterial pathogens based on the interaction of their cell wall carbohydrates with natural receptors called lectins. An immobilized lectin-cell-biotinylated lectin complex was formed in this assay. Here, we studied the binding specificity of several plant lectins to E. coli and S. aureus cells, and pairs characterized by high-affinity interactions were selected for the assay. Wheat germ agglutinin and Ricinus communis agglutinin were used to develop enzyme-linked lectinosorbent assays for E. coli and S. aureus cells with the detection limits of 4 × 106 and 5 × 105 cells/mL, respectively. Comparison of the enzyme-linked immonosorbent assay and the enzyme-linked lectinosorbent assay demonstrated no significant differences in detection limit values for E. coli. Due to the accessibility and universality of lectin reagents, the proposed approach is a promising tool for the control of a wide range of bacterial pathogens.  相似文献   

10.
《Luminescence》2004,19(4):193-198
A chemiluminescence‐based assay is developed for the rapid detection of Escherichia coli in fresh produce. The assay was based on the reaction of β‐galactosidase enzyme from E. coli with a phenylgalactosidase‐substituted dioxetane substrate. Light emitted from the reaction was measured in a luminometer and data correlated with counts of E. coli enumerated on sorbitol–MacConkey agar plates. A strain of E. coli O157:H7 was used to inoculate samples of fresh produce to differentiate the inoculum from the natural E. coli potentially present on the produce. Fresh market samples were tested for generic E. coli and E. coli O157:H7. Signi?cant differences in light emission were found in samples with high initial E. coli counts when market samples were compared to respective heat‐treated samples. The assay was able to detect E. coli in all produce tested, particularly at higher contamination or inoculation levels. The sensitivity of the assay ranged between 102–105 CFU within 30 min. The chemiluminescence assay provides a simple and rapid method for detection of viable E. coli, an important step towards enhancing food safety. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Flow Cytometric Analysis of Marine Bacteria with Hoechst 33342   总被引:18,自引:8,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
We investigated the accuracy and precision of flow cytometric (FCM) estimates of bacterial abundances using 4′, 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) and Hoechst 33342 (HO342, a bisbenzamide derivative) on paraformaldehyde-fixed seawater samples collected from two stations near Oahu, Hawaii. The accuracy of FCM estimates was assessed against direct counts by using epifluorescence microscopy. DAPI and HO342 differ in two aspects of their chemistry that make HO342 better suited for staining marine heterotrophic bacteria for FCM analysis. These differences are most important in studies of open-ocean ecosystems that require dual-beam FCM analysis to clearly separate heterotrophic bacterial populations from populations of photosynthetic Prochlorococcus spp. Bacterial populations were easier to distinguish from background fluorescence when stained with HO342 than when stained with DAPI, because HO342 has a higher relative fluorescence quantum yield. A substantially higher coefficient of variation of blue fluorescence, which was probably due to fluorescent complexes formed by DAPI with double-stranded RNA, was observed for DAPI-stained populations. FCM estimates averaged 2.0 and 12% higher than corresponding epifluorescence microscopy direct counts for HO342 and DAPI-stained samples, respectively. A paired-sample t test between FCM estimates and direct counts found no significant difference for HO342-stained samples but a significant difference for DAPI-stained samples. Coefficients of variation of replicate FCM abundance estimates ranged from 0.63 to 2.9% (average, 1.5%) for natural bacterial concentrations of 6 × 105 to 15 × 105 cells ml-1.  相似文献   

12.
A repeated cross-sectional study was conducted to identify farm management, environment, weather, and landscape factors that predict the count of generic Escherichia coli on spinach at the preharvest level. E. coli was enumerated for 955 spinach samples collected on 12 farms in Texas and Colorado between 2010 and 2012. Farm management and environmental characteristics were surveyed using a questionnaire. Weather and landscape data were obtained from National Resources Information databases. A two-part mixed-effect negative binomial hurdle model, consisting of a logistic and zero-truncated negative binomial part with farm and date as random effects, was used to identify factors affecting E. coli counts on spinach. Results indicated that the odds of a contamination event (non-zero versus zero counts) vary by state (odds ratio [OR] = 108.1). Odds of contamination decreased with implementation of hygiene practices (OR = 0.06) and increased with an increasing average precipitation amount (mm) in the past 29 days (OR = 3.5) and the application of manure (OR = 52.2). On contaminated spinach, E. coli counts increased with the average precipitation amount over the past 29 days. The relationship between E. coli count and the average maximum daily temperature over the 9 days prior to sampling followed a quadratic function with the highest bacterial count at around 24°C. These findings indicate that the odds of a contamination event in spinach are determined by farm management, environment, and weather factors. However, once the contamination event has occurred, the count of E. coli on spinach is determined by weather only.  相似文献   

13.
Viable bacteria were found to coexist with developing embryos in egg capsules (cocoons) of the earthworm Eisenia fetida. Earthworms were reared under standardized conditions, and bacterial densities were measured in distinct batches of cocoons collected weekly for 10 weeks. Cocoons weighing 12 mg contained a mean viable bacterial population of approximately 108 CFU/g of cocoons. No difference was found in viable counts obtained from cocoons incubated at 15°C and cocoons incubated at 24°C. Viable bacterial numbers increased with cocoon age, while acridine orange direct counts of microbial cells were stable at approximately 109 cells per g of cocoons. Bacteria isolated from cocoons were used to develop antisera in rabbits for the production of strain-specific fluorescent antibodies. Fluorescent antibody and selective plating techniques were used to monitor populations of these bacteria in earthworm bedding and to determine whether cocoons acquire bacteria from the environment in which they are formed. Cocoon isolates were readily recovered from cocoons formed in inoculated bedding at densities of 108 CFU/g of cocoons. Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 and UMR 161 added to bedding were also recovered from cocoons, but at lower densities than cocoon isolates. Escherichia coli K-12(pJP4) inoculum was recovered from bedding but not from cocoons. The bacterial complement of Eisenia fetida cocoons is affected by inoculation of selected bacterial isolates in the worm growth environment.  相似文献   

14.
Two enzymes (methylases) that catalyze the transfer of methyl groups from S-adenosyl-l-methionine to tRNA (prepared from Escherichia coli) have been partially purified from extracts of HeLa cells. One catalyzes the methylation of adenine residues of the tRNA to give 1-methyladenine units and the other is responsible for the conversion of guanine residues to N2-methylguanine and N2,N2-dimethylguanine (and may be a mixture of two enzymes). Activities of these relatively unstable enzymes could be maintained by storage at ?20 °C in the presence of 50% glycerol. Substrate specificity studies have revealed that bacterial tRNA (E. coli, Bacillus subtilis) can be used as substrate, whereas tRNA of animal origin (HeLa cells, rat liver) cannot be used. Of the specific tRNA's tested, E. coli tRNAfMet was used as substrate by both enzymes. E. coli tRNATyr was used by the adenine-1-methylase but not by the guanine-N2-methylase. The adenine-1-methylase catalyzed the transfer of approximately one methyl group per mole of either tRNAfMet or tRNATyr offered as substrate; in the presence of the guanine-N2-methylase 1 mole of E. coli tRNAfMet accepted 1 mole of methyl. Studies with the use of both enzymes established that enzymic methylation of the guanine site of E. coli tRNAfMet did not interfere with subsequent methylation of an adenine residue and neither did prior methylation of adenine interfere with the subsequent methylation of a guanine residue. In the presence of both enzymes, approximately 2 moles of methyl groups were accepted by 1 mole of the E. coli tRNAfMet.  相似文献   

15.
Surface water and groundwater are continuously used as sources of drinking water in many metropolitan areas of the United States. The quality of water from these sources may be reduced due to increases in contaminants such as Escherichia coli from urban and agricultural runoffs. In this study, a multiplex fluorogenic PCR assay was used to quantify E. coli O157:H7 in soil, manure, cow and calf feces, and dairy wastewater in an artificial wetland. Primers and probes were designed to amplify and quantify the Shiga-like toxin 1 (stx1) and 2 (stx2) genes and the intimin (eae) gene of E. coli O157:H7 in a single reaction. Primer specificity was confirmed with DNA from 33 E. coli O157:H7 and related strains with and without the three genes. A direct correlation was determined between the fluorescence threshold cycle (CT) and the starting quantity of E. coli O157:H7 DNA. A similar correlation was observed between the CT and number of CFU per milliliter used in the PCR assay. A detection limit of 7.9 × 10−5 pg of E. coli O157:H7 DNA ml−1 equivalent to approximately 6.4 × 103 CFU of E. coli O157:H7 ml−1 based on plate counts was determined. Quantification of E. coli O157:H7 in soil, manure, feces, and wastewater was possible when cell numbers were ≥3.5 × 104 CFU g−1. E. coli O157:H7 levels detected in wetland samples decreased by about 2 logs between wetland influents and effluents. The detection limit of the assay in soil was improved to less than 10 CFU g−1 with a 16-h enrichment. These results indicate that the developed PCR assay is suitable for quantitative determination of E. coli O157:H7 in environmental samples and represents a considerable advancement in pathogen quantification in different ecosystems.  相似文献   

16.
Legionella species are the causative agents of human legionellosis, and bathing facilities have been identified as the sources of infection in several outbreaks in Japan. Researchers in Japan have recently reported evidence of significant associations between bacterial counts and the occurrence of Legionella in bathing facilities and in a hot tub model. A convenient and quantitative bacterial enumeration method is therefore required as an indicator of Legionella contamination or disinfection to replace existing methods such as time-consuming Legionella culture and expensive Legionella-DNA amplification. In this study, we developed a rapid detection method (RDM) to monitor the risk of Legionella using an automated microbial analyzing device based on flow cytometry techniques to measure the total number of bacteria in water samples within two minutes, by detecting typical patterns of scattered light and fluorescence. We first compared the results of our RDM with plate counting results for five filtered hot spring water samples spiked with three species of bacteria, including Legionella. Inactivation of these samples by chlorine was also assessed by the RDM, a live/dead bacterial fluorescence assay and plate counting. Using the RDM, the lower limit of quantitative bacterial counts in the spiked samples was determined as 3.0 × 103 (3.48 log) counts mL− 1. We then used a laboratory model of a hot tub and found that the RDM could monitor the growth curve of naturally occurring heterotrophic bacteria with 1 and 2 days' delayed growth of amoeba and Legionella, respectively, and could also determine the killing curve of these bacteria by chlorination. Finally, samples with ≥ 3.48 or < 3.48 log total bacterial counts mL− 1 were tested using the RDM from 149 different hot tubs, and were found to be significantly associated with the positive or negative detection of Legionella with 95% sensitivity and 84% specificity. These findings indicated that the RDM can be used for Legionella control at bathing facilities, especially those where the effectiveness of chlorine is reduced by the presence of Fe2+, Mn2+, NH4+, skin debris, and/or biofilms in the water.  相似文献   

17.
Elevated Abundance of Bacteriophage Infecting Bacteria in Soil   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Here we report the first direct counts of soil bacteriophage and show that substantial populations of these viruses exist in soil (grand mean = 1.5 × 107 g−1), at least 350-fold more than the highest numbers estimated from traditional viable plaque counts. Adding pure cultures of a Serratia phage to soil showed that the direct counting methods with electron microscopy developed here underestimated the added phage populations by at least eightfold. So, assuming natural phages were similarly underestimated, virus numbers in soil averaged 1.5 × 108 g−1, which is equivalent to 4% of the total population of bacteria. This high abundance was to some extent confirmed by hybridizing colonies grown on Serratia and Pseudomonas selective media with cocktails of phage infecting these bacteria. This showed that 8.9 and 3.9%, respectively, hybridized with colonies from the two media and confirmed the presence of phage DNA sequences in the cultivable fraction of the natural population. Thus, soil phage, like their aquatic counterparts, are likely to be important in controlling bacterial populations and mediating gene transfer in soil.  相似文献   

18.
Yeast cell wall fractions have been proposed to bind enteropathogenic bacteria. The aim of this study was to develop a quantitative assay by measuring the optical density as growth parameter of adhering bacteria. The exponential growth phase of adhering bacteria was determined by optical density reading and compared with the colony count (CFU/mL). A linear regression was compiled and the bacterial number bound to the yeast cell wall product could be determined. Further focus was the investigation of a yeast cell wall from strain Trichosporon mycotoxinivorans (MTV) for its ability to bind gram negative Salmonella, E. coli and Campylobacter strains and gram positive probiotic bacteria of the genera lactobacilli and bifidobacteria as well as gram positive Clostridium perfringens quantitatively. The gram negative probiotic strain E. coli Nissle 1917 was also investigated. Seven out of 10 S. Typhimurium and S. Enteritidis strains adhered to the cell wall product with an amount between 103 and 104 CFU/10 μg. Four out of 7 E. coli strains showed an average binding capability (102 CFU/10 µg) whereas 4 × 103E. coli F4 cells bound per 10 μg yeast cell wall. E. coli 0149 K91, E. coli 0147 K89, C. jejuni and C. perfringens as well the genera lactobacilli and bifidobacteria did not bind to the yeast cell wall. E. coli Nissle 1917 was bound with 2 × 102 CFU/10 μg. These results demonstrate that cell wall from MTV can be used to differentially bind E. coli spp. and Salmonella spp. up to 8 × 104 CFU/10 μg. Thus certain yeast cell walls may prevent enteric infections caused by selective bacteria. This methodical approach would be an accurate tool in the feed industry for quality control of yeast cell wall products.  相似文献   

19.
We have developed a highly sensitive approach to assess the abundance of uncultured bacteria in water samples from the central Baltic Sea by using a noncultured member of the “Epsilonproteobacteria” related to Thiomicrospira denitrificans as an example. Environmental seawater samples and samples enriched for the target taxon provided a unique opportunity to test the approach over a broad range of abundances. The approach is based on a combination of taxon- and domain-specific real-time PCR measurements determining the relative T. denitrificans-like 16S rRNA gene and 16S rRNA abundances, as well as the determination of total cell counts and environmental RNA content. It allowed quantification of T. denitrificans-like 16S rRNA molecules or 16S rRNA genes as well as calculation of the number of ribosomes per T. denitrificans-like cell. Every real-time measurement and its specific primer system were calibrated using environmental nucleic acids obtained from the original habitat for external standardization. These standards, as well as the respective samples to be measured, were prepared from the same DNA or RNA extract. Enrichment samples could be analyzed directly, whereas environmental templates had to be preamplified with general bacterial primers before quantification. Preamplification increased the sensitivity of the assay by more than 4 orders of magnitude. Quantification of enrichments with or without a preamplification step yielded comparable results. T. denitrificans-like 16S rRNA molecules ranged from 7.1 × 103 to 4.4 × 109 copies ml−1 or 0.002 to 49.7% relative abundance. T. denitrificans-like 16S rRNA genes ranged from 9.0 × 101 to 2.2 ×106 copies ml−1 or 0.01 to 49.7% relative abundance. Detection limits of this real-time-PCR approach were 20 16S rRNA molecules or 0.2 16S rRNA gene ml−1. The number of ribosomes per T. denitrificans-like cell was estimated to range from 20 to 200 in seawater and reached up to 2,000 in the enrichments. The results indicate that our real-time PCR approach can be used to determine cellular and relative abundances of uncultured marine bacterial taxa and to provide information about their levels of activity in their natural environment.  相似文献   

20.
The presence of Bacillus in natural biofilms which develop in sink drainage pipes is not widely studied. Therefore, the main aim of this study was to isolate and identify Bacillus spp. using the BIOLOG GEN III system as a phenotypic fingerprint and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). A total of 61 biofilms samples were collected from sink drainage pipes in a kitchen and bathroom of different households in Helwan area and both laboratory and hospital collected from National Research Centre (NRC). Bacillus was isolated from the biofilms using HiCrome Bacillus Agar followed by isolates identification by both BIOLOG to the species level and PCR using genus specific primers to the genera level. Bacillus was detected in all tested biofilm samples (61 samples). The highest counts were observed in hospital sink drainage pipes (105?CFU/10?cm2) while; the lowest counts were observed in both bathroom and laboratory sink drainage pipes (102?CFU/10 cm?2). In total, 61% Bacillus isolates were identified by BIOLOG while, 67% isolates were confirmed by PCR. The diversity of Bacillus among species level using BIOLOG were 34% B. cereus, 23% B. subtilis ss subtilis, 17% B. thuringiensis, 16% B. licheniformis and 13% B. amyloliquefaciens. It can be concluded that; PCR is more sensitive than BIOLOG for identification of Bacillus. However, BIOLOG can identify Bacillus at species level and test 94 carbon and chemical sources on a microplate in one shot. Thus, the combination between phenotyping by BIOLOG and molecular approaches such as PCR for identification of bacterial isolates is recommended.  相似文献   

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