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1.
The fatty acid composition of Listeria monocytogenes Scott A was determined by close-interval sampling over the entire biokinetic temperature range. There was a high degree of variation in the percentage of branched-chain fatty acids at any given temperature. The percentage of branched C17 components increased with growth temperature in a linear manner. However, the percentages of iso-C15:0 (i15:0) and anteiso-C15:0 (a15:0) were well described by third-order and second-order polynomial curves, respectively. There were specific temperature regions where the proportion of branched-chain fatty acids deviated significantly from the trend established over the entire growth range. In the region from 12 to 13 degrees C there were significant deviations in the percentages of both i15:0 and a15:0 together with a suggested deviation in a17:0, resulting in a significant change in the total branched-chain fatty acids. In the 31 to 33 degrees C region the percentage of total branched-chain components exhibited a significant deviation. The observed perturbations in fatty acid composition occurred near the estimated boundaries of the normal physiological range for growth.  相似文献   

2.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the branched-chain fatty acid anteiso-C15:0 plays a critical role in the growth of Listeria monocytogenes at low temperatures by ensuring sufficient membrane fluidity. Studies utilizing a chemically defined minimal medium revealed that the anteiso fatty acid precursor isoleucine largely determined the fatty acid profile and fatty acid response of the organism to lowered growth temperature. When isoleucine was sufficient, the fatty acid profile was very uniform, with anteiso fatty acids comprising up to 95% of total fatty acid, and the major fatty acid adjustment to low temperature was fatty acid chain shortening, which resulted in an increase of anteiso-C15:0 solely at the expense of anteiso-C17:0. When isoleucine was not supplied, the fatty acid profile became more complex and was readily modified by leucine, which resulted in a significant increase of corresponding iso fatty acids and an inability to grow at 10°C. Under this condition, the increase of anteiso-C15:0 at low temperature resulted from the combined effect of increasing the anteiso:iso ratio and chain shortening. A branched-chain α-keto acid dehydrogenase-defective strain largely lost the ability to increase the anteiso:iso ratio. Cerulenin, an inhibitor of β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase (FabF), induced a similar fatty acid chain shortening as low temperature did. We propose that the anteiso precursor preferences of enzymes in the branched-chain fatty acid biosynthesis pathway ensure a high production of anteiso fatty acids, and cold-regulated chain shortening results in a further increase of anteiso-C15:0 at the expense of anteiso-C17:0.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of pressure and temperature on the fatty acid composition in a barotolerant deep-sea bacterium that had branched-chain fatty acids were examined. The major fatty acids of the strain at atmospheric pressure were iso-C15:0, C16:1, iso-C17:0, and iso-C17:1. As the growth pressure increased, the proportion of unsaturated fatty acid increased because of an increase in the proportion of iso-C17:1. On the other hand, as the growth temperature decreased, the proportion of unsaturated fatty acid increased because of the increase in the proportion of C16:1 and C18:1.  相似文献   

4.
Disturbances typically associated with the study of soil microbial communities, i.e., sieving, storage, and subsequent incubation at elevated temperatures, were investigated with phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analyses. Treatment effects were quantified by statistical analyses of the mole percentage distribution of the individual fatty acids. Changes in the concentrations of individual fatty acids over a 7-week storage period at 4.5°C were generally not statistically significant. Sieving effects (mesh size, 4 or 2 mm) on CO2 evolution and the PLFA profile were monitored over 3 weeks; the physical disturbance had only minor effects, although some damage to fungal hyphae by the first sieving (<4 mm) was suggested by a decrease in the signature fatty acid 18:2 ω6c. Temperature effects were investigated by incubating soil for up to 3 weeks at 4.5, 10, or 25°C. Principal component analyses demonstrated a significant shift in the PLFA composition at 25°C over the first 2 weeks, while changes at the other two temperatures were minor. Several of the changes observed at 25°C could be explained with reference to mechanisms of temperature adaptation or as a response to conditions of stress, including a decrease in the degree of unsaturation, an increased production of cyclopropyl fatty acids, and increased ratios of the branched-chain fatty acids iso-15:0 and iso-17:0 over anteiso-15:0 and anteiso-17:0, respectively. A decrease in the total amount of PLFA was also indicated.  相似文献   

5.
Listeria monocytogenes is a food-borne pathogen that grows at refrigeration temperatures and increases its content of anteiso-C15:0 fatty acid, which is believed to be a homeoviscous adaptation to ensure membrane fluidity, at these temperatures. As a possible novel approach for control of the growth of the organism, the influences of various fatty acid precursors, including branched-chain amino acids and branched- and straight-chain carboxylic acids, some of which are also well-established food preservatives, on the growth and fatty acid composition of the organism at 37°C and 10°C were studied in order to investigate whether the organism could be made to synthesize fatty acids that would result in impaired growth at low temperatures. The results indicate that the fatty acid composition of L. monocytogenes could be modulated by the feeding of branched-chain amino acid, C4, C5, and C6 branched-chain carboxylic acid, and C3 and C4 straight-chain carboxylic acid fatty acid precursors, but the growth-inhibitory effects of several preservatives were independent of effects on fatty acid composition, which were minor in the case of preservatives metabolized via acetyl coenzyme A. The ability of a precursor to modify fatty acid composition was probably a reflection of the substrate specificities of the first enzyme, FabH, in the condensation of primers of fatty acid biosynthesis with malonyl acyl carrier protein.Listeriosis is a severe and life-threatening human infection encompassing meningoencephalitis, meningitis, focal infections in the immunocompromised, and stillbirths and neonatal sepsis due to infection of pregnant women (2). The disease is caused by the Gram-positive food-borne pathogen Listeria monocytogenes, which is responsible for common-source and sporadic disease involving a variety of different foods (27). Listeriosis has a high fatality rate (24). The U.S. Department of Agriculture has a zero tolerance policy for L. monocytogenes in ready-to-eat products, and high costs are associated with product recalls.L. monocytogenes has a remarkably low minimum growth temperature, e.g., −0.1°C (34), and thus the organism can multiply to dangerous levels when food is kept at refrigeration temperatures. We are interested in the molecular mechanisms of L. monocytogenes psychrotolerance, with a view to applying this knowledge to improve the control of the growth of the organism. Although the adaptations involved in low-temperature tolerance are global in scope, we have focused on changes in fatty acid composition that result in homeoviscous adjustments of membrane fluidity (31, 36). L. monocytogenes has a fatty acid composition that is dominated to an unusual extent (90% or more) by branched-chain fatty acids (BCFAs); the major fatty acids are anteiso-C15:0, anteiso-C17:0, and iso-C15:0. Numerous studies have shown that the major change in fatty acid composition when L. monocytogenes is grown at low temperatures is an increase in the content of anteiso-C15:0 fatty acid to 65% or more of the total (1, 12, 23, 25, 26, 28). Two cold-sensitive mutants with Tn917 insertions in the branched-chain α-keto acid dehydrogenase gene complex (bkd) were deficient in BCFAs, grew poorly at low temperatures, and had decreased membrane fluidity; all of these defects could be restored by growth in the presence of 2-methylbutyrate (2-MB), a precursor of odd-numbered anteiso fatty acids, including anteiso-C15:0 fatty acid (1, 7, 13, 37). We believe that anteiso-C15:0 fatty acid imparts fluidity to the cytoplasmic membrane, as revealed by its low phase transition temperature in model phospholipids (18) and disruption of the close packing of fatty acyl chains (21, 35).The amino acids isoleucine, leucine, and valine are the starting points for the biosynthesis of odd-numbered anteiso, odd-numbered iso, and even-numbered iso fatty acids, respectively (18, 37). The amino acids are converted to their corresponding α-keto acid derivatives through the activity of branched-chain amino acid transaminase. Branched-chain α-keto acid dehydrogenase (Bkd) then converts these α-keto compounds to branched-chain acyl coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) primers of fatty acid biosynthesis (18). These primers are then used to initiate fatty acid biosynthesis through the activity of β-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase III (FabH), which prefers branched-chain acyl-CoAs to acetyl-CoA as substrates (4, 22, 32). β-Keto-acyl carrier protein synthase II (FabF) is responsible for subsequent rounds of elongation until the acyl chain reaches 14 to 17 carbon atoms (36).We wished to ascertain whether we could manipulate the fatty acid composition of L. monocytogenes by feeding precursors that favored the production of fatty acids other than anteiso-C15:0 and thereby inhibit the growth of the organism, especially at low temperatures. Kaneda (15, 16) has grouped Bacillus subtilis fatty acids into four pairs based on the precursors from which they are generated, i.e., anteiso-C15:0 and C17:0 from isoleucine, iso-C15:0 and C17:0 from leucine, iso-C14:0 and C16:0 from valine, and n-C14:0 and n-C16:0 from acetate or butyrate. The proportions of the fatty acids could be modulated by precursor feeding. We have studied the effects of feeding the potential fatty acid precursors branched-chain amino acids, branched-chain α-keto acids, short branched-chain carboxylic acids, short straight-chain carboxylic acids, medium-length straight-chain carboxylic acids, branched-chain C6 carboxylic acids, and sodium diacetate (Fig. (Fig.1)1) on the growth and fatty acid composition of L. monocytogenes. Various short-chain carboxylic acids are used as food preservatives (5, 8, 29), and it was of interest to see whether any of them had an effect on the fatty acid composition of L. monocytogenes. Precursors giving rise to C5 and C6 branched-chain acyl-CoA derivatives, propionate, and butyrate had significant impacts on growth and fatty acid composition. Acetate and precursors that were metabolized to acetyl-CoA had minor effects on fatty acid composition, indicating that their preservative action is not due to effects on fatty acid composition.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Structures of potential fatty acid precursors.  相似文献   

6.
The fatty acid composition of Thermus spp., including T. aquaticus ATCC 25104, T. thermophilus DSM 579, T. flavus DSM 674, and seven wild strains was examined. Organisms were tested at a minimum of either 35, 40, or 45°C and at an optimum of 60 or 70°C. Total fatty acid content per dry weight of cells varied between 1.2 and 3.7%, and the quantity of fatty acids was higher at the high temperature range in the majority of strains. At the optimum temperature, strains could be assigned to three chemotaxonomic groups with reference to the ratio of iso C15:0/iso C17:0. In six of the strains the ratio of iso C15:0/iso C17:0 remained unchanged at the minimum temperature, whereas in four strains the ratio was reversed. The proportion of the C15:0 and C17:0 isobranched acids was decreased and the proportion of anteisobranched fatty acids, namely anteiso C15:0, anteiso C17:0, and anteiso C17:1, was increased at the lower temperature range. Some changes were seen in the levels of the n-C16:0 and iso C16:0 acids, but these were strain specific.  相似文献   

7.
The maximum growth temperature, the optimal growth temperature, and the estimated normal physiological range for growth of Shewanella gelidimarina are functions of water activity (aw), which can be manipulated by changing the concentration of sodium chloride. The growth temperatures at the boundaries of the normal physiological range for growth were characterized by increased variability in fatty acid composition. Under hyper- and hypoosmotic stress conditions at an aw of 0.993 (1.0% [wt/vol] NaCl) and at an aw of 0.977 (4.0% [wt/vol] NaCl) the proportion of certain fatty acids (monounsaturated and branched-chain fatty acids) was highly regulated and was inversely related to the growth rate over the entire temperature range. The physical states of lipids extracted from samples grown at stressful aw values at the boundaries of the normal physiological range exhibited no abrupt gel-liquid phase transitions when the lipids were analyzed as liposomes. Lipid packing and adaptational fatty acid composition responses are clearly influenced by differences in the temperature-salinity regime, which are reflected in overall cell function characteristics, such as the growth rate and the normal physiological range for growth.  相似文献   

8.
Elimination of plasmids from Thermus flavus, T. thermophilus and three wild Thermus strains caused alterations in growth temperature range, pigmentation and membrane fatty acids without affecting viability. Following plasmid elimination all Thermus strains lost their ability to grow above 70°C. In addition, the minimum growth temperature was lowered by 5–10°C. Fatty acids were reduced by an average of approximately 35%. In addition, the contribution of iso- and anteisobranched fatty acids were altered in four of the five strains. The iso C15:0/iso C17:0 ratio approached 1.0 in all strains, whereas the anteiso C15:0/anteiso C17:0 was reduced to 0.2. The iso C16:0/normal-C16:0 ratio increased in all strains due to an increase in iso C16:0 in four strains and a reduction in normal-C16:0 relative to iso C16:0 in one strain. However, it was evident that the plasmid-free strains were able to compensate for these alterations in membrane fluidity to a certain extent by reducing the average chain length of isobranched acids. Altered fatty acid metabolism at the level of precursors may have influenced membrane composition and consequently growth temperature range.  相似文献   

9.
The influence of salinity on the growth, gross chemical composition and fatty acid composition of three species of marine microalgae,Isochrysis sp.,Nannochloropsis oculata andNitzschia (frustulum), was investigated. There was no significant change in growth rate ofIsochrysis sp. andN. (frustulum) over the experimental range of salinity (10–35 ppt), whileN. oculata had a significantly slower growth rate only at 35 ppt. The ash content of all three species increased with increasing salinity. Two species,Isochrysis sp. andN. oculata, showed significant linear increases in total lipid content with increasing salinity over the range 10 to 35 ppt.N. (frustulum) showed significant linear decrease in total lipids, with the highest percentage at low salinity within the range 10–15 ppt. Variation in salinity had only a slight effect on the total protein, the soluble carbohydrate and chlorophylla content of all species. All species responded to change in salinity by modifying their cellular fatty acid compositions. Significant positive correlations were observed between increase in salinity and increase in the percentage ofcis-9-hexadecenoic acid [16:1 (n-7)] over the entire experimental range inN. (frustulum) and between 25–35 ppt inN. oculata. There were curved relationships between salinity and percentage of hexadecanoic acid [16:0] inN. oculata andN. (frustulum), with maxima within the range 25–30 ppt for both species. A curved relationship was found between salinity and percentage of eicosapentaenoic acid [20–5(n-3)], forN. (frustulum), with lowest percentages of the fatty acid within the range 25–30 ppt. There was no consistent pattern in the percentages of other major fatty acids as functions of salinity. The Northern Territory isolateN. (frustulum) was unusual in having a substantial increase in total fatty acids with decreasing salinity (85 mg g–1 dry wt at 10 ppt compared with 33 mg g–1 at 35 ppt). The optimum salinities for the production of maximum amount of lipids and the essential fatty acids 20:5(n-3) and/or 22:6(n-3) were as follows:25 ppt forIsochrysis sp. [22:6(n-3)]; 20–30 ppt forN. oculata [20:5(n-3)]; 10–15 ppt forN. (frustulum) [20:5(n-3) and 22:6(n-3)].Author for correspondence  相似文献   

10.
Wada H  Murata N 《Plant physiology》1990,92(4):1062-1069
Changes in glycerolipid and fatty acid composition with a change in growth temperature were studied in the cyanobacterium, Synechocystis PCC6803. Under isothermal growth conditions, temperature did not significantly affect the composition of the various classes of lipids, but a decrease in temperature altered the degree of unsaturation of C18 acids at the sn-1 position, but not that of C16 acids at the sn-2 position of the glycerol moiety in each class of lipids. When the growth temperature was shifted from 38°C to 22°C, the desaturation of C18 acids, but not that of C16 acids, was stimulated. The desaturation of fatty acids occurred only in the light and was inhibited by chloramphenicol, rifampicin and 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1, 1-dimethylurea, but not by cerulenin, an inhibitor for fatty acid synthesis. These findings suggest that desaturase activities are induced after a shift from a higher to a lower temperature, and that the desaturation of fatty acids is connected with the reactions involved in photosynthetic electron transport.  相似文献   

11.
Listeria monocytogenes is a food-borne pathogen capable of growth at refrigeration temperatures. Membrane lipid fatty acids are major determinants of a sufficiently fluid membrane state to allow growth at low temperatures. L. monocytogenes was characterized by a fatty acid profile dominated to an unusual extent (> 95%) by branched-chain fatty acids, with the major fatty acids being anteiso-C15:0, anteiso-C17:0, and iso-C15:0 in cultures grown in complex or defined media at 37 degrees C. Determination of the fatty acid composition of L. monocytogenes 10403S and SLCC 53 grown over the temperature range 45 to 5 degrees C revealed two modes of adaptation of fatty acid composition to lower growth temperatures: (i) shortening of fatty acid chain length and (ii) alteration of branching from iso to anteiso. Two transposon Tn917-induced cold-sensitive mutants incapable of growth at low temperatures had dramatically altered fatty acid compositions with low levels of i-C15:0, a-C15:0, and a-C17:0 and high levels of i-C14:0, C14:0, i-C16:0, and C16:0. The levels of a-C15:0 and a-C17:0 and the ability to grow at low temperatures were restored by supplementing media with 2-methylbutyric acid, presumably because it acted as a precursor of methylbutyryl coenzyme A, the primer for synthesis of anteiso odd-numbered fatty acids. When mid-exponential-phase 10403S cells grown at 37 degrees C were temperature down-shocked to 5 degrees C they were able, for the most part, to reinitiate growth before the membrane fatty acid composition had reset to a composition more typical for low-temperature growth. No obvious evidence was found for a role for fatty acid unsaturation in adaptation of L. monocytogenes to cold temperature. The switch to a fatty acid profile dominated by a-C15:0 at low temperatures and the association of cold sensitivity with deficiency of a-C15:0 focus attention on the critical role of this fatty acid in growth of L. monocytogenes in the cold, presumably through its physical properties and their effects, in maintaining a fluid, liquid-crystalline state of the membrane lipids.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of branched-chain and ω-alicyclic fatty acids on the transition temperature of Bacillus subtilis lipids was studied by measuring the fluorescence depolarisation of the probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene incorporated into lipid bilayers. Only anteiso-C15 and C17 fatty acid-enriched lipids showed no transition in the observed temperature range. Compared to the transition of normal lipids iso-fatty acid-enriched lipids have a slightly higher transition temperature. The incorporation of ω-alicyclic fatty acids with increasing size of the alicycle leads to a decrease in the transition temperature. A possible role of ω-cyclohexane fatty acids in Bacillus acidocaldarius is proposed.  相似文献   

13.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the branched-chain fatty acid anteiso-C15:0 plays a critical role in the growth of Listeria monocytogenes at low temperatures by ensuring sufficient membrane fluidity. Studies utilizing a chemically defined minimal medium revealed that the anteiso fatty acid precursor isoleucine largely determined the fatty acid profile and fatty acid response of the organism to lowered growth temperature. When isoleucine was sufficient, the fatty acid profile was very uniform, with anteiso fatty acids comprising up to 95% of total fatty acid, and the major fatty acid adjustment to low temperature was fatty acid chain shortening, which resulted in an increase of anteiso-C15:0 solely at the expense of anteiso-C17:0. When isoleucine was not supplied, the fatty acid profile became more complex and was readily modified by leucine, which resulted in a significant increase of corresponding iso fatty acids and an inability to grow at 10 degrees C. Under this condition, the increase of anteiso-C15:0 at low temperature resulted from the combined effect of increasing the anteiso:iso ratio and chain shortening. A branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase-defective strain largely lost the ability to increase the anteiso:iso ratio. Cerulenin, an inhibitor of beta-ketoacyl-acyl carrier protein synthase (FabF), induced a similar fatty acid chain shortening as low temperature did. We propose that the anteiso precursor preferences of enzymes in the branched-chain fatty acid biosynthesis pathway ensure a high production of anteiso fatty acids, and cold-regulated chain shortening results in a further increase of anteiso-C15:0 at the expense of anteiso-C17:0.  相似文献   

14.
Analyses were made of the fatty-acid composition of Candida utilis NCYC 321 grown in a chemostat at a dilution rate (equal to growth rate) of 0.1 hr−1 and at temperatures in the range of 30 to 15 C and dissolved oxygen tensions between 75 and <1 mm of Hg. Cells grown under glucose limitation or NH4+ limitation contained mainly C16:0, C16:1, C18:0, C18:1, C18:2, and C18:3 acids as detected by gas-liquid chromatography of methyl esters of the acids from lipids extracted with chloroform-methanol. The relative proportions of these acids varied with the growth temperature and the dissolved-oxygen tension in the culture. A decrease in growth temperature from 30 to 20 C led to an increased synthesis of unsaturated acids in cells grown under either limitation at a fixed-oxygen tension in the range of 75 to 5 mm of Hg. In cultures with a dissolved-oxygen tension of 1 and <1 mm of Hg, a further decrease in temperature to 15 C caused an increased synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids. A decrease in dissolved-oxygen tension led to a diminished synthesis of unsaturated fatty acids in cells grown at a fixed temperature under either limitation. Cells grown at a fixed temperature under glucose limitation synthesized a greater proportion of C16 acids at the expense of C18 acids as the dissolved oxygen tension was decreased from 75 to <1 mm of Hg. A preferential synthesis of C16 acids also occurred as the growth temperature was decreased from 30 to 15 C in cells grown under glucose limitation at a fixed-oxygen tension. The same effect was observed in cells grown under NH4+ limitation when the temperature was lowered from 30 to 20 C; but when the temperature was decreased further to 15 C, the cells synthesized a slightly greater proportion of C18 acids. Synthesis of a large proportion of C16 acids was accompanied by an excretion of pyruvate, and occasionally traces of 2-ketoglutarate, and an increased intracellular accumulation of certain amino acids.  相似文献   

15.
The fatty acid composition of two thermophilic anaerobes was determined, and the results were compared with those from a mesophilic and a psychrophilic anaerobe. Notable differences were that the thermophiles contained a higher content of saturated straight- and branched-chain fatty acids, and, of the latter, iso C15 was the predominant type. The mesophile and psychrophile were characterized by having a higher percentage of unsaturated fatty acids. An unidentified fatty acid, present in all of the organisms, was purified from the psychrophile. By physical and chemical analysis the structure of the unknown acid was resolved and found to be the unsaturated cyclopropane fatty acid, 12,13-methylene-9-tetradecenoic acid.  相似文献   

16.
Eight species of marine phytoplankton showed significant variation in the relative amount of some fatty acids (FAs) in response to variation in temperature. Large changes in relative amounts of certain FAs occurred as a result of a 15° C change in growth temperature. For example, 14:0 increased from ?4% of total FAs at 10° C to > 20% at 25° C for Chaetoceros simplex and Isochrysis aff. galbana but decreased for Phaeodactylum tricornutum. The percentage of the polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) 16:ω1 was consistently greater at 10° C than at 25° C, and the converse was usually true for 16: 4ω3. Calculated over all eight species, there was a modest but significant inverse relationship between the percentage of PUFAs and temperature. Only for Thalassiosira pseudonana was the percentage of either of the PUFAs and nutritionally essential fatty acids (EFAs) also an inverse function of temperature. For T. pseudonana, the percentage of the EFA 22:6ω3 decreased linearly with increasing temperature over the range from 10 to 25° C. For three species, the ratio of unsaturated/saturated FAs was correlated with growth rate when growth rate was controlled by variation in irradiance and temperature. Only for Thalassiosira pseudonana was the ratio of unsaturated/saturated FAs also an inverse function of temperature alone.  相似文献   

17.
The distribution of phospholipid ester-linked fatty acids (PLFA) in sediments of eutrophic bays (Hiroshima Bay and Aki Nada) was studied to quantify the microbial biomass, community structure, and nutritional status. A total of 63 fatty acids in the range of C10 to C24 were determined. They consist of saturated fatty acids, branched fatty acids, monounsaturated fatty acids, and polyunsaturated fatty acids, and variation was revealed in the relative proportions of these fatty acids in sediments. On the basis of the PLFA concentration in sediments, the calculated microbial biomass showed variation (mean ± standard deviation = 0.70 × 108 ± 0.53 × 108 cells per g [dry weight] of sediment) in the eutrophic bays. In sediments, a higher amount of biomass was observed in the coastal area of Hiroshima Bay than that observed in the rest of the bay and adjacent Aki Nada. The microbial community structure of the present study area, as characterized by the PLFA profiles, showed very low percentages of polyunsaturated fatty acids and long-chain fatty acids characteristic of microeukary-otes and terrestrial input, respectively, and high percentages of fatty acids characteristic of bacteria. The distribution of PLFA profiles also showed the relative contribution of both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, especially sulfate-reducing bacteria, in the study area. The relative proportions of PLFA revealed distinctive differences among the stations of the study area, as is evidenced from six clusters obtained for the PLFA profiles. The results of Tukey's honestly significant difference test further confirmed that the sediments in the coastal area of Hiroshima Bay were significantly enriched by a number of fatty acids when compared with other areas investigated where relatively few fatty acids were present in significant quantities. No marked variation in environmental parameters in the surface- and bottom-water samples was observed, indicating the absence of any water movement in the study area. Furthermore, low redox potential and the levels of sulfide in the sediment revealed the reduced condition of the sediment. The existing environmental conditions and pollution of the study area were attributed to the observed microbial community structure in the sediments.  相似文献   

18.
Candida ingens, a pellicle-forming yeast utilizing volatile fatty acids, grew over a pH range of 4.1 to 6.0 on nonsterile supernatants from anaerobically fermented pig wastes; growth was inconsistent between pH 4.1 and 4.6. When ambient temperature above the pellicle was 21°C and the temperature of the medium was 29 to 32°C, a pH range of 4.8 to 5.0 gave yields of 1.90 to 3.31 g of dry matter per liter, and 0.059 to 0.065 mol of volatile fatty acids was utilized per liter. There was no advantage in utilization of volatile fatty acids and yield of dry matter in keeping the pH constant during a 24-h growth period. C. ingens grew at pH 4.8 and 5.0 when both ambient and medium temperatures were 30°C. When ambient temperature was 10°C, maximum yield and utilization of volatile fatty acids occurred at a medium temperature of 28 to 30°C.  相似文献   

19.
The phospholipid headgroup composition and fatty acid composition of a gram-positive halotolerant Planococcus sp. (strain A4a) were examined as a function of growth temperature (5 to 35 degrees C) and NaCl content (0 to 1.5 M) of the growth medium. When the growth temperature was decreased, the relative amount of mono-unsaturated branched-chain fatty acids increased. When Planococcus sp. strain A4a was grown in media containing high NaCl concentrations, the relative amount of the major fatty acid, Ca15:0, increased. The relative amount of anionic phospholipid also increased when the NaCl concentration of the growth medium was increased. The increase in anionic phospholipid content resulted from a decrease in the relative mole percent content of phosphatidylethanolamine and an increase in the relative mole percent content of cardiolipin.  相似文献   

20.
Mutants of the thermoacidophilic Bacillus acidocaldarius, auxotrophic for shikimate or cyclohyxyl-carboxylate, were isolated and characterized. The cyclohexylcarboxylate auxotrophs could be divided by crossfeeding experiments into two groups according to their genetic block. The cyclohexylcarboxylate auxotrophs were deficient in -cyclohexyl fatty acid biosynthesis. If the mutants were fed with branched-chain amino acids or short branched-chain fatty acids instead of cyclohexylcarboxylate they form a fatty acid pattern consisting of branched-chain fatty acids. In the high temperature/low pH range the growth yield of cells with this fatty acid pattern is lower as compared to wild type cells or mutants fed with cyclohexylcarboxylate. The same cells are also more sensitive to heat shocks and ethanol. The transport systems for lysine, glutamate and glucose are severely altered by the fatty acid pattern. It was also shown that the density of the lipids containing -cyclohexyl fatty acids is higher compared to cells with branched-chain fatty acids. Thus it could be supposed that this alteration influences transport systmes in a direct manner or via energization of the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

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