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1.
Summary An obligate syntrophic culture was selected in mineral medium with phenol as the only carbon and energy source. The consortium consisted of a short and a long rod-shaped bacterium and of low numbers of Desulfovibrio cells, and grew only in syntrophy with methanogens, e. g. Methanospirillum hungatei. Under N2/CO2, phenol was degraded via benzoate to acetate, CH4 and CO2, while in the presence of H2/CO2 benzoate was formed, but not further degraded. When 4-hydroxybenzoate was fed to the mixed culture, it was decarboxylated to phenol prior to benzoate formation and subsequent ring cleavage. Isolation of pure cultures of the two rod-shaped bacteria failed. Microscopic observations during feeding of either 4-hydroxybenzoate, phenol or benzoate implied an obligate syntrophic interdependence of the two different rod-shaped bacteria and of the methanogen. The non-motile rods formed phenol from 4-hydroxybenzoate and benzoate from phenol, requiring an as yet unknown co-substrate or co-factor, probably cross-fed by the short, motile rod. The short, motile rodshaped bacterium grew only in syntrophy with methanogens and degraded benzoate to acetate, CO2 and methane. Desulfovibrio sp., present in low numbers, apparently could not contribute to the degradation of phenol or 4-hydroxybenzoate.  相似文献   

2.
From anaerobic freshwater enrichment cultures with 3-hydroxybenzoate as sole substrate, a slightly curved rod-shaped bacterium was isolated in coculture with Desulfovibrio vulgaris as hydrogen scavenger. The new isolate degraded only 3-hydroxybenzoate or benzoate, and depended on syntrophic cooperation with a hydrogenoxidizing methanogen or sulfate reducer. 3-Hydroxybenzoate was degraded via reductive dehydroxylation to benzoate. With 2-hydroxybenzoate (salicylate), short coccoid rods were enriched from anaerobic freshwater mud samples, and were isolated in defined coculture with D. vulgaris. This isolate also fermented 3-hydroxybenzoate or benzoate in obligate syntrophy with a hydrogen-oxidizing anaerobe. The new isolates were both Gram-negative, non-sporeforming strict anaerobes. They fermented hydroxybenzoate or benzoate to acetate, CO2, and, presumably, hydrogen which was oxidized by the syntrophic partner organism. With hydroxybenzoates, but not with benzoate, Acetobacterium woodii could also serve as syntrophic partner. Other substrates such as sugars, alcohols, fatty or amino acids were not fermented. External electron acceptors such as sulfate, sulfite, nitrate, or fumarate were not reduced. In enrichment cultures with 4-hydroxybenzoate, decarboxylation to phenol was the initial step in degradation which finally led to acetate, methane and CO2.  相似文献   

3.
A stable, syntrophic benzoate-degrading bacterial consortium was enriched from sewage sludge. It oxidized benzoate or 3-phenylpropionate to acetate, H2 and CO2. As hydrogen scavengers Methanospirillum hungatei and Desulfovibrio sp. were present. The benzoate-degrading bacteria of this syntrophic culture and of Syntrophus buswelli were able to grow with benzoate/crotonate or crotonate alone in the absence of a hydrogen-utilizing partner organism. If crotonate was the only substrate, acetate and butyrate were produced, while during growth on benzoate or 3-phenylpropionate crotonate served as a reducible co-substrate and was exclusively converted to butyrate. In the presence of crotonate interspecies hydrogen transfer was not necessary as a hydrogen sink. The benzoate degrader was isolated as a pure culture with crotonate as the only carbon source. The pure culture could also grow with benzoate/crotonate or 3-phenylpropionate/crotonate. The effect of high concentrations of crotonate and of acetate or butyrate on growth of the benzoate degrader was investigated. The benzoate degrader was compared with S. buswellii for its morphology, physiology and DNA base composition. Except for the fact that S. buswellii was also able to grow on cinnamate, no differences between the two organisms were detected. The isolate is named S. buswelli, strain GA.  相似文献   

4.
A syntrophic consortium was enriched in a basal medium containing cinnamate as the carbon and energy source. It was found to consist of three morphologically distinct microbes, viz., a short, rod-shaped, non-motile bacterium with distinctly pointed ends, Papillibacter cinnamivorans; a rod-shaped, motile bacterium with rounded ends, Syntrophus sp.; and a methanoarchaeon, Methanobacterium sp. This methanogen was then replaced by a collection strain of Methanobacterium formicicum. A syntrophic interdependency of the three partners of the consortium was observed during growth on cinnamate. In the presence of bromoethanesulfonic acid (BESA), cinnamate was transformed to benzoate, whereas under methanogenic conditions without BESA, cinnamate was first transformed to benzoate via β-oxidation and subsequently completely degraded into acetate, CH4, and CO2. Papillibacter cinnamivorans was responsible for benzoate production from cinnamate, whereas a syntrophic association between Syntrophus sp. and the methanogen degraded benzoate to acetate, CH4, and CO2. A new anaerobic degradation pathway of cinnamate into benzoate via β-oxidation by a pure culture of P. cinnamivorans is proposed. Received: 27 December 2001 / Accepted: 28 March 2002  相似文献   

5.
Three strains of strictly anaerobic Gram-negative, non-sporeforming, motile bacteria were enriched and isolated from freshwater sediments with 1,3-propanediol as sole energy and carbon source. Strain OttPdl was a sulfate-reducing bacterium which grew also with lactate, ethanol, propanol, butanol, 1,4-butanediol, formate or hydrogen plus CO2, the latter only in the presence of acetate. In the absence of sulfate, most of these substrates were fermented to the respective fatty acids in syntrophic cooperation with Methanospirillum hungatei. Sulfur, thiosulfate, or sulfite were reduced, nitrate not. The other two isolates degraded propanediol only in coculture with Methanospirillum hungatei. Strain OttGlycl grew in pure culture with acetoin and with glycerol in the presence of acetate. Strain WoAcl grew in pure culture only with acetoin. Both strains did not grow with other substrates, and did not reduce nitrate, sulfate, sulfur, thiosulfate or sulfite. The isolates were affiliated with the genera Desulfovibrio and Pelobacter. The pathways of propanediol degradation and the ecological importance of this process are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
A syntrophic consortium was enriched in a basal medium containing cinnamate as the carbon and energy source. It was found to consist of three morphologically distinct microbes, viz., a short, rod-shaped, non-motile bacterium with distinctly pointed ends, Papillibacter cinnamivorans; a rod-shaped, motile bacterium with rounded ends, Syntrophus sp.; and a methanoarchaeon, Methanobacterium sp. This methanogen was then replaced by a collection strain of Methanobacterium formicicum. A syntrophic interdependency of the three partners of the consortium was observed during growth on cinnamate. In the presence of bromoethanesulfonic acid (BESA), cinnamate was transformed to benzoate, whereas under methanogenic conditions without BESA, cinnamate was first transformed to benzoate via beta-oxidation and subsequently completely degraded into acetate, CH(4), and CO(2). Papillibacter cinnamivorans was responsible for benzoate production from cinnamate, whereas a syntrophic association between Syntrophus sp. and the methanogen degraded benzoate to acetate, CH(4), and CO(2). A new anaerobic degradation pathway of cinnamate into benzoate via beta-oxidation by a pure culture of P. cinnamivorans is proposed.  相似文献   

7.
Fermentative toluene degradation in anaerobic defined syntrophic cocultures   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
A syntrophic coculture of a new sulfate-reducing isolate, strain TRM1, with Wolinella succinogenes degraded toluene with either fumarate or NO3- as the terminal electron acceptor. Neither strain TRM1 nor W. succinogenes could metabolise toluene under these conditions in pure culture. Syntrophic degradation was 2-3 times slower than toluene utilisation by strain TRM1 in pure culture with sulfate as electron acceptor. The culture did not produce benzoate or fatty acids like acetate or propionate in detectable amounts. An increase in biomass of the syntrophic toluene-degrading culture was shown in a growth curve with nitrate as the terminal electron acceptor. Both partner organisms were detected microscopically at the end of the growth experiment. Syntrophic degradation of toluene with W. succinogenes and fumarate as the terminal electron acceptor was also demonstrated with the iron reducer Geobacter metallireducens. The results provide the first example of a fermentative oxidation of an aromatic hydrocarbon in a defined coculture.  相似文献   

8.
An anaerobic phthalate isomer-degrading strain (JTT) that we previously isolated was characterized. In addition, a strictly anaerobic, mesophilic, syntrophic phthalate isomer-degrading bacterium, designated strain JIT, was isolated and characterized in this study. Both were non-motile rods that formed spores. In both strains, the optimal growth was observed at temperatures around 37°C and neutral pH. In syntrophic co-culture with the hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanospirillum hungatei, both strains could utilize two or three phthalate isomers for growth, and produce acetate and methane as end products. Strain JTT was able to grow on isophthalate, terephthalate, and a number of low-molecular weight aromatic compounds, such as benzoate, hydroquinone, 2-hydroxybenzoate, 3-hydroxybenzoate, 2,5-dihydroxybenzoate, 3-phenylpropionate in co-culture with M. hungatei. It could also grow on crotonate, hydroquinone and 2,5-dihydroxybenzoate in pure culture. Strain JIT utilized all of the three phthalate isomers as well as benzoate and 3-hydroxybenzoate for growth in co-culture with M. hungatei. No substrates were, however, found to support the axenic growth of strain JIT. Neither strain JTT nor strain JIT could utilize sulfate, sulfite, thiosulfate, nitrate, fumarate, Fe (III) or 4-hydroxybenzoate as electron acceptor. Phylogenetically, strains JTT and JIT were relatively close to the members of the genera Pelotomaculum and Cryptanaerobacter in ‘Desulfotomaculum lineage I’. Physiological and chemotaxonomic characteristics indicated that the two isolates should be classified into the genus Pelotomaculum, creating two novel species for them. Here, we propose Pelotomaculum terephthalicum sp. nov. and Pelotomaculum isophthalicum sp. nov. for strain JTT and strain JIT, respectively. The type strains are strains JTT (= DSM 16121T = JCM 11824T = NBRC 100523T) and JIT (= JCM 12282T = BAA-1053T) for P. terephthalicum and P. isophthalicum, respectively.Nucleotide sequence accession number: The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers of the 16S rRNA gene sequences of strains JTT and JIT are AB091323 and AB232785, respectively  相似文献   

9.
A strictly anaerobic, benzoate-degrading bacterium,Syntrophus buswellii strain GA, was able to degrade benzoate or 3-phenylpropionate to acetate, CO2 and H2 if the hydrogen partial pressure was sufficiently low. The hydrogen was removed in syntrophic coculture byMethanospirillum hungatei or byDesulfovibrio sp. through interspecies hydrogen transfer or in pure culture by the use of crotonate as reducible cosubstrate. Alternatively,S. buswellii strain GA could grow in pure culture with crotonate. Activities of seven catabolic enzymes were measured in crude cell extracts ofS. buswellii strain GA grown with various substrates and of crotonate-grownS. buswellii strain DSM 2612A. Benzoate, 3-phenylpropionate and crotonate were activated by CoA ligases. Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase was found to be involved in the degradation of aromatic compounds and enzymes catalysing -oxidation were involved in the reaction sequence from crotonyl-CoA to acetate. Ac-type cytochrome was present in the cytoplasm, whereasb-type cytochromes were associated with the membranes of bothS. buswelli strains grown on crotonate. These indicated the presence of an electron-transport system. A high growth yield of crotonate-grownS. buswellii strain GA might be explained by electron-transport phosphorylation in addition to substrate-level phosphorylation.  相似文献   

10.
An anaerobic, motile, gram-negative, rod-shaped, syntrophic, benzoate-degrading bacterium, strain SB, was isolated in pure culture with crotonate as the energy source. Benzoate was degraded only in association with an H2-using bacterium. The kinetics of benzoate degradation by cell suspensions of strain SB in coculture with Desulfovibrio strain G-11 was studied by using progress curve analysis. The coculture degraded benzoate to a threshold concentration of 214 nM to 6.5 microM, with no further benzoate degradation observed even after extended incubation times. The value of the threshold depended on the amount of benzoate added and, consequently, the amount of acetate produced. The addition of sodium acetate, but not that of sodium chloride, affected the threshold value; higher acetate concentrations resulted in higher threshold values for benzoate. When a cell suspension that had reached a threshold benzoate concentration was reamended with benzoate, benzoate was used without a lag. The hydrogen partial pressure was very low and formate was not detected in cell suspensions that had degraded benzoate to a threshold value. The Gibbs free energy change calculations showed that the degradation of benzoate was favorable when the threshold was reached. These studies showed that the threshold for benzoate degradation was not caused by nutritional limitations, the loss of metabolic activity, or inhibition by hydrogen or formate. The data are consistent with a thermodynamic explanation for the existence of a threshold, but a kinetic explanation based on acetate inhibition may also account for the existence of a threshold.  相似文献   

11.
An anaerobic, motile, gram-negative, rod-shaped bacterium is described which degrades benzoate in coculture with an H2-utilizing organism and in the absence of exogenous electron acceptors such as O2, SO 4 = or NO 3 - . The bacterium was isolated from a municipal primary, anaerobic sewage digestor using anaerobic roll-tube medium with benzoate as the main energy source and in syntrophic association with an H2-utilizing sulfate-reducing Desulfovibrio sp. which cannot utilize benzoate or fatty acids apart from formate as energy source. The benzoate utilizer produced acetate (3 mol/mol of substrate degraded) and presumably CO2 and H2, or formate from benzoate. In media without sulfate and with Methanospirillum hungatei (a methanogen that utilizes only H2–CO2 or formate as the energy source) added, 3 mol of acetate and 0.7 mol of methane were produced per mol of benzoate and CO2 was probably formed. Low numbers of Desulfovibrio sp. were present in the methanogenic coculture and a pure coculture of the benzoate utilizer with M. hungatei was not obtained. The generation times for growth of the sulfate-reducing and methanogenic cocultures were 132 and 166h, respectively. The benzoate utilizer did not utilize other common aromatic compounds, C 3 - –C7 monocarboxylic acids, or C4-C6 dicarboxylic acids for growth, nor did it appear to use SO 4 = , NO 3 - or fumarate as alternative electron acceptors. Addition of H2 inhibited growth and benzoate degradation.  相似文献   

12.
Phenol degradation under methanogenic conditions has long been studied, but the anaerobes responsible for the degradation reaction are still largely unknown. An anaerobe, designated strain UI(T), was isolated in a pure syntrophic culture. This isolate is the first tangible, obligately anaerobic, syntrophic substrate-degrading organism capable of oxidizing phenol in association with an H(2)-scavenging methanogen partner. Besides phenol, it could metabolize p-cresol, 4-hydroxybenzoate, isophthalate, and benzoate. During the degradation of phenol, a small amount of 4-hydroxybenzoate (a maximum of 4 microM) and benzoate (a maximum of 11 microM) were formed as transient intermediates. When 4-hydroxybenzoate was used as the substrate, phenol (maximum, 20 microM) and benzoate (maximum, 92 microM) were detected as intermediates, which were then further degraded to acetate and methane by the coculture. No substrates were found to support the fermentative growth of strain UI(T) in pure culture, although 88 different substrates were tested for growth. 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis indicated that strain UI(T) belongs to an uncultured clone cluster (group TA) at the family (or order) level in the class Deltaproteobacteria. Syntrophorhabdus aromaticivorans gen. nov., sp. nov., is proposed for strain UI(T), and the novel family Syntrophorhabdaceae fam. nov. is described. Peripheral 16S rRNA gene sequences in the databases indicated that the proposed new family Syntrophorhabdaceae is largely represented by abundant bacteria within anaerobic ecosystems mainly decomposing aromatic compounds.  相似文献   

13.
Anaerobic enrichments with methoxylated aromatic compounds as substrates (vanillate, syringate, trimethoxycinnamate) were inoculated from freshwater mud and sewage sludge samples. In 12 out of 16 cultures the same type of rod-shaped, motile bacteria was selectively enriched. Two strains, NZva16 and NZva24, were isolated in pure culture and recognized as Acetobacterium woodii by comparison with the type strain (DSM 1030).All three Acetobacterium strains were able to grow with all 10 of the tested aromatic compounds containing methoxyl groups. In the presence of bicarbonate, these substrates were used as sole organic electron donors and carbon sources. UV-absorption spectra revealed that the aromatic rings were not degraded, and that the corresponding hydroxy derivatives of the methoxylated compounds were formed. The only further fermentation product formed was acetate. When equimolar concentrations of the methoxylated benzoic acid derivatives were applied, the growth yields were proportional to the number of methoxyl groups per molecule. Methoxyl groups or methanol were metabolized by homoacetate fermentation: in the presence of bicarbonate 4 mol of acetate. In case of the methoxylated cinnamic acid derivatives less acetate was formed and the corresponding hydroxy derivatives of phenylpropionic acid appeared as a result of the double bond reduction in the acrylate side chain. In comparison to the benzoate derivatives with the same number of methoxyl groups, higher growth yields were obtained with the cinnamate derivatives.  相似文献   

14.
An anaerobic, mesophilic, syntrophic benzoate-degrading bacterium, designated strain FB(T), was isolated from methanogenic sludge which had been used to treat wastewater from the manufacture of terephthalic acid. Cells were non-motile gram-positive rods that formed spores. The optimum temperature for growth was 35-40 degrees C, and the optimum pH was 7.0-7.2. A co-culture with the hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanospirillum hungatei converted benzoate to acetate, carbon dioxide, and methane. Butyrate transiently accumulated at a high concentration of 2.5 mM during degradation. Besides benzoate, no other compound tested supported growth of the co-culture. Crotonate supported growth of strain FB(T) in pure culture. Furthermore, the strain degraded benzoate in pure culture with crotonate as co-substrate to produce acetate and butyrate. The strain was not able to utilize sulfate, sulfite, thiosulfate, nitrate, fumarate, or Fe(III) as electron acceptor. The G+C content of the DNA was 46.8 mol%. Strain FB(T) contained MK-7 as the major quinone and C(16:1) as the major fatty acid. 16S rDNA sequence analysis revealed that the strain was a member of the genus Sporotomaculum, even though it exhibited significant differences, such as the capacity for syntrophic growth, to the known member of the genus. Hence, we propose the name Sporotomaculum syntrophicum sp. nov. for strain FB(T). The type strain is strain FB(T) (DSM 14795, JCM 11475).  相似文献   

15.
From an anaerobic enrichment culture with vanillate as substrate, a catechol-degrading lemon-shaped nonsporing sulfate-reducing bacterium, strain NZva20, was isolated in pure culture. Growth occurred in defined, bicarbonate-buffered, sulfide-reduced freshwater medium with catechol as sole electron donor and carbon source. Catechol was completely oxidized to CO2 with an average growth yield of 31 g cell dry mass per mol of catechol, corresponding to 9.5 g cell dry mass per mol of sulfate reduced. Further substrates utilized as electron donors and carbon sources were resorcinol, hydroquinone, benzoate and several other aromatic compounds, hydrogen plus carbon dioxide, formate, lactate, pyruvate, alcohols including methanol, dicarboxylic acids, acetate, propionate and higher fatty acids up to 18 carbon atoms. Instead of sulfate, sulfite, thiosulfate, dithionite or nitrate served as electron acceptors. Nitrate was reduced to ammonium. Strain NZva20 is the first bacterium in which the complete oxidation of organic substrates is linked to the ammonification of nitrate. Elemental sulfur was not utilized as electron acceptor. In the absence of an electron acceptor slow growth occurred on pyruvate or fumarate. The G+C content of the DNA of strain NZva20 was 52.4 mol%. Cytochromes were present. Desulfoviridin could not be detected. Strain NZva20 is described as type strain of a new species, Desulfobacterium catecholicum sp. nov.Affectionately dedicated to Professor Ralph S. Wolfe on the occassion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

16.
Syntrophy is essential for the efficient conversion of organic carbon to methane in natural and constructed environments, but little is known about the enzymes involved in syntrophic carbon and electron flow. Syntrophus aciditrophicus strain SB syntrophically degrades benzoate and cyclohexane-1-carboxylate and catalyses the novel synthesis of benzoate and cyclohexane-1-carboxylate from crotonate. We used proteomic, biochemical and metabolomic approaches to determine what enzymes are used for fatty, aromatic and alicyclic acid degradation versus for benzoate and cyclohexane-1-carboxylate synthesis. Enzymes involved in the metabolism of cyclohex-1,5-diene carboxyl-CoA to acetyl-CoA were in high abundance in S. aciditrophicus cells grown in pure culture on crotonate and in coculture with Methanospirillum hungatei on crotonate, benzoate or cyclohexane-1-carboxylate. Incorporation of 13C-atoms from 1-[13C]-acetate into crotonate, benzoate and cyclohexane-1-carboxylate during growth on these different substrates showed that the pathways are reversible. A protein conduit for syntrophic reverse electron transfer from acyl-CoA intermediates to formate was detected. Ligases and membrane-bound pyrophosphatases make pyrophosphate needed for the synthesis of ATP by an acetyl-CoA synthetase. Syntrophus aciditrophicus, thus, uses a core set of enzymes that operates close to thermodynamic equilibrium to conserve energy in a novel and highly efficient manner.  相似文献   

17.
The microbial populations responsible for anaerobic degradation of phthalate isomers were investigated by enrichment and isolation of those microbes from anaerobic sludge treating wastewater from the manufacturing of terephthalic acid. Primary enrichments were made with each of three phthalate isomers (ortho-, iso-, and terephthalate) as the sole energy source at 37 degrees C with two sources of anaerobic sludge (both had been used to treat wastewater containing high concentrations of phthalate isomers) as the inoculum. Six methanogenic enrichment cultures were obtained which not only degraded the isomer used for the enrichment but also had the potential to degrade part of other phthalate isomers as well as benzoate with concomitant production of methane, presumably involving strictly syntrophic substrate degradation. Our 16S rRNA gene-cloning analysis combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed that the predominant bacteria in the enrichment cultures were affiliated with a recently recognized non-sulfate-reducing subcluster (subcluster Ih) in the group 'Desulfotomaculum lineage I' or a clone cluster (group TA) in the class delta-PROTEOBACTERIA: Several attempts were made to isolate these microbes, resulting in the isolation of a terephthalate-degrading bacterium, designated strain JT, in pure culture. A coculture of the strain with the hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanospirillum hungatei converted terephthalate to acetate and methane within 3 months of incubation, whereas strain JT could not degrade terephthalate in pure culture. During the degradation of terephthalate, a small amount of benzoate was transiently accumulated as an intermediate, indicative of decarboxylation of terephthalate to benzoate as the initial step of the degradation. 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis revealed that the strain was a member of subcluster Ih of the group 'Desulfotomaculum lineage I', but it was only distantly related to other known species.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Scanning electron microphotographs from the biofilm of a pilot scale anaerobic fluid-ized-bed reactor fed with acetate, propionate, and butyrate as carbon sources showed a predominance of filamentous organisms resembling Methanothrix sp. which could be isolated as an al-most pure culture as well as a Methanosarcina strain. Three syntrophic cultures, enriched in the medium of Boone and Xun, contained four or five microscopically distinguishable microorganisms, among them Methanospirillum sp., Methanothrix sp., Methanosarcina sp., and rods of acetogenic bacteria degrading propionate or butyrate effectively.  相似文献   

19.
The anaerobic bacterium Syntrophus aciditrophicus metabolized benzoate in pure culture in the absence of hydrogen-utilizing partners or terminal electron acceptors. The pure culture of S. aciditrophicus produced approximately 0.5 mol of cyclohexane carboxylate and 1.5 mol of acetate per mol of benzoate, while a coculture of S. aciditrophicus with the hydrogen-using methanogen Methanospirillum hungatei produced 3 mol of acetate and 0.75 mol of methane per mol of benzoate. The growth yield of the S. aciditrophicus pure culture was 6.9 g (dry weight) per mol of benzoate metabolized, whereas the growth yield of the S. aciditrophicus-M. hungatei coculture was 11.8 g (dry weight) per mol of benzoate. Cyclohexane carboxylate was metabolized by S. aciditrophicus only in a coculture with a hydrogen user and was not metabolized by S. aciditrophicus pure cultures. Cyclohex-1-ene carboxylate was incompletely degraded by S. aciditrophicus pure cultures until a free energy change (ΔG′) of −9.2 kJ/mol was reached (−4.7 kJ/mol for the hydrogen-producing reaction). Cyclohex-1-ene carboxylate, pimelate, and glutarate transiently accumulated at micromolar levels during growth of an S. aciditrophicus pure culture with benzoate. High hydrogen (10.1 kPa) and acetate (60 mM) levels inhibited benzoate metabolism by S. aciditrophicus pure cultures. These results suggest that benzoate fermentation by S. aciditrophicus in the absence of hydrogen users proceeds via a dismutation reaction in which the reducing equivalents produced during oxidation of one benzoate molecule to acetate and carbon dioxide are used to reduce another benzoate molecule to cyclohexane carboxylate, which is not metabolized further. Benzoate fermentation to acetate, CO2, and cyclohexane carboxylate is thermodynamically favorable and can proceed at free energy values more positive than −20 kJ/mol, the postulated minimum free energy value for substrate metabolism.  相似文献   

20.
An obligately anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium was isolated on alanine in co-culture with H2-scavenging Desulfovibrio and obtained in pure culture with glycine as sole fermentation substrate. The isolated strain, al-2, was motile by a polar to subpolar flagellum and stained Gram-positive. The guanine plus cytosine content of the DNA was 44.0 mol%. Strain al-2 grew in defined, reduced glycine media supplemented with biotin. The pure culture fermented 4 mol glycine to 3 mol acetate, 4 mol ammonia and 2 mol CO2. Under optimum conditions (34°C, pH 7.3), the doubling time on glycine was 60 min and the molar growth yield 7.6 g cell dry mass. Serine was fermented to acetate, ethanol, CO2, H2 and ammonia. In addition, betaine, sarcosine or creatine served as substrates for growth and acetate production if H2, formate or e.g. valine were added as H-donors. In pure culture on alanine under N2, strain al-2 grew very poorly and produced H2 up to a partial pressure of 3.6 kPa (0.035 atm). Desulfovibrio species, Methanospirillum hungatei and Acetobacterium woodii served as H2-scavengers that allowed good syntrophic growth on alanine. The co-cultures also grew on aspartate, leucine, valine or malate. Alanine and aspartate were stoichiometrically degraded to acetate and ammonia, whereas the reducing equivalents were recovered as H2S, CH4 or newly synthetized acetate, respectively. Growth of strain al-2 in co-culture with the hydrogenase-negative, formate-utilizing Desulfovibrio baarsii indicated that a syntrophy was also possible by interspecies formate transfer. Growth on glycine, or on betaine, sarcosine or creatine (plus H-donors) depended strictly on the addition of selenite (0.1 M); selenite was not required for fermentation of serine, or for degradation of alanine, aspartate or valine by the co-cultures. Cell-free extracts of glycine-grown cells contained active glycine reductase, glycine decarboxylase and reversible methyl viologen-dependent formate dehydrogenase in addition to the other enzymes necessary for an oxidation to CO2. In all reactions NADP was the preferred H-carrier. Both formate and glycine could be synthesized from bicarbonate. Serine-grown cells did not contain serine hydroxymethyl transferase but serine dehydratase and other enzymes commonly involved in pyruvate metabolism to acetate, CO2 and H2. The enzymes involved in glycine metabolism were repressed during growth on serine. By its morphology and physiology, strain al-2 did not resemble described amino acid-degrading species. Therefore, the new isolate is proposed as type strain of a new species, Eubacterium acidaminophilum.  相似文献   

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