首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 265 毫秒
1.
Sphingomonas species were commonly isolated from biofilms in drinking water distribution systems in Finland (three water meters) and Sweden (five water taps in different buildings). The Sphingomonas isolates (n = 38) were characterized by chemotaxonomic, physiological and phylogenetic methods. Fifteen isolates were designated to species Sphingomonas aromaticivorans, seven isolates to S. subterranea, two isolates to S. xenophaga and one isolate to S. stygia. Thirteen isolates represented one or more new species of Sphingomonas. Thirty-three isolates out of 38 grew at 5 degrees C on trypticase soy broth agar (TSBA) and may therefore proliferate in the Nordic drinking water pipeline where the temperature typically ranges from 2 to 12 degrees C. Thirty-three isolates out of 38 grew at 37 degrees C on TSBA and 15 isolates also grew on blood agar at 37 degrees C. Considering the potentially pathogenic features of sphingomonas, their presence in drinking water distribution systems may not be desirable.  相似文献   

2.
Aromatic-degrading Sphingomonas isolates from the deep subsurface.   总被引:12,自引:3,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
An obligately aerobic chemoheterotrophic bacterium (strain F199) previously isolated from Southeast Coastal Plain subsurface sediments and shown to degrade toluene, naphthalene, and other aromatic compounds (J. K. Fredrickson, F. J. Brockman, D. J. Workman, S. W. Li, and T. O. Stevens, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 57:796-803, 1991) was characterized by analysis of its 16S rRNA nucleotide base sequence and cellular lipid composition. Strain F199 contained 2-OH14:0 and 18:1 omega 7c as the predominant cellular fatty acids and sphingolipids that are characteristic of the genus Sphingomonas. Phylogenetic analysis of its 16S rRNA sequence indicated that F199 was most closely related to Sphingomonas capsulata among the bacteria currently in the Ribosomal Database. Five additional isolates from deep Southeast Coastal Plain sediments were determined by 16S rRNA sequence analysis to be closely related to F199. These strains also contained characteristic sphingolipids. Four of these five strains could also grow on a broad range of aromatic compounds and could mineralize [14C]toluene and [14C]naphthalene. S. capsulata (ATCC 14666), Sphingomonas paucimobilis (ATCC 29837), and one of the subsurface isolates were unable to grow on any of the aromatic compounds or mineralize toluene or naphthalene. These results indicate that bacteria within the genus Sphingomonas are present in Southeast Coastal Plain subsurface sediments and that the capacity for degrading a broad range of substituted aromatic compounds appears to be common among Sphingomonas species from this environment.  相似文献   

3.
There have been numerous reports in the literature of diverse bacteria capable of degrading pentachlorophenol (PCP). In order to gain further insight into the phylogenetic relationships of PCP-degrading bacteria, we examined four strains: Arthrobacter sp. strain ATCC 33790, Flavobacterium sp. strain ATCC 39723, Pseudomonas sp. strain SR3, and Sphingomonas sp. strain RA2. These organisms were isolated from different geographical locations and all of them degrade high concentrations (100–200 mg/L) of PCP. Southern blot analyses determined that these bacteria all harbour DNA that encodes similar, if not identical, genes involved in PCP degradation. Comparison of the 16S rRNA nucleotide sequences revealed that these organisms were very closely related and, in fact, represent a monophyletic group. The 16S rRNA analyses together with fatty acid and sphingolipid analyses strongly suggest that the four strains are members of the genus Sphingomonas . The close relationship of the four organisms is supported by nucleotide sequence analysis data of the pcpB locus encoding PCP-4-monooxygenase, the first enzyme in the PCP degradative pathway.  相似文献   

4.
Sphingomonas is an organism of major interest for the degradation of organic contaminants in soils and other environments. A medium based on the aminoglycoside antibiotic streptomycin (Sm) was developed, which, together with the yellow pigmentation of Sphingomonas, facilitated the detection, recovery and quantification of culturable Sphingomonas from soils. All 29 previously described bacterial strains belonging to 17 different Sphingomonas species were able to grow on mineral media containing 200 microg ml(-1) streptomycin, showing that the capacity to resist high concentrations of Sm is a common characteristic within Sphingomonas. Incorporation of Sm into the mineral medium led to a significant reduction in the background microbial population and a concomitant 100 times more sensitive detection of Sphingomonas inoculated in non-sterile soil matrices. The Sm-containing medium was used to examine a variety of hydrocarbon-contaminated soils for the presence and biodiversity of Sphingomonas. Incorporation of Sm in the medium led to a significant increase in the number of yellow-pigmented colonies. Comparison of contaminated and non-contaminated soils derived from the same site revealed colonization by culturable yellow-pigmented Sm-resistant bacteria of the polluted location solely. Both yellow and non-yellow-pigmented colonies were purified from plates containing glucose and Sm, and BOX-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to sort out clonally related strains. Representative strains from the major BOX-PCR clusters were identified using FAME and partial 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Forty-eight of 58 Sm-resistant isolates were identified as Sphingomonas sp. Streptomycin-resistant Sphingomonas isolates generated BOX-PCR diversity patterns that were site dependent and represented different species mainly belonging to Sphingomonas subgroups containing species formerly designated as Sphingopyxis and Sphingobium. The ability to degrade phenanthrene was only found in a minority of the Sphingomonas isolates, which all originated from soils containing high phenanthrene concentrations.  相似文献   

5.
Bacterial strains of the genus Sphingomonas are often isolated from contaminated soils for their ability to use polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) as the sole source of carbon and energy. The direct detection of Sphingomonas strains in contaminated soils, either indigenous or inoculated, is, as such, of interest for bioremediation purposes. In this study, a culture-independent PCR-based detection method using specific primers targeting the Sphingomonas 16S rRNA gene combined with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) was developed to assess Sphingomonas diversity in PAH-contaminated soils. PCR using the new primer pair on a set of template DNAs of different bacterial genera showed that the method was selective for bacteria belonging to the family Sphingomonadaceae.Single-band DGGE profiles were obtained for most Sphingomonas strains tested. Strains belonging to the same species had identical DGGE fingerprints, and in most cases, these fingerprints were typical for one species. Inoculated strains could be detected at a cell concentration of 10(4) CFU g of soil(-1). The analysis of Sphingomonas population structures of several PAH-contaminated soils by the new PCR-DGGE method revealed that soils containing the highest phenanthrene concentrations showed the lowest Sphingomonas diversity. Sequence analysis of cloned PCR products amplified from soil DNA revealed new 16S rRNA gene Sphingomonas sequences significantly different from sequences from known cultivated isolates (i.e., sequences from environmental clones grouped phylogenetically with other environmental clone sequences available on the web and that possibly originated from several potential new species). In conclusion, the newly designed Sphingomonas-specific PCR-DGGE detection technique successfully analyzed the Sphingomonas communities from polluted soils at the species level and revealed different Sphingomonas members not previously detected by culture-dependent detection techniques.  相似文献   

6.
Hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) is a highly recalcitrant pesticide that persists in soils. Three novel HCH-degrading strains (DS2, DS2-2 and DS3-1) were isolated after enrichment from HCH-contaminated soil from Germany. These strains efficiently degraded the alpha-, gamma- and delta-isomers of HCH, while strain DS3-1 also degraded beta-HCH. Based on 16S rDNA analysis, strain DS3-1 was closely related to Sphingomonas taejonensis, while strains DS2 and DS2-2 were closely related to Sphingomonas flava and seven HCH-degrading strains recently isolated from HCH-contaminated Spanish soil. Hence, geographic origin of the strains was not reflected in their phylogenetic affiliation. Subsequently, lin genes involved in HCH degradation, virtually identical to those from Sphingomonas paucimobilis strains UT26 from Japan and B90A from India, were identified in strains DS3-1, DS2, DS2-2 and five of the strains from Spain. The conserved lin gene sequences and structural organization, as well as the close association with IS6100, suggest a shared lin gene origin and recent horizontal gene transfer among phylogenetically diverged Sphingomonas strains in remote geographic locations. The loss of the ability to degrade gamma-HCH was associated with the deletion of the linA gene, probably due to recombination involving IS6100 elements, of which several copies are located in the lin cluster region.  相似文献   

7.
8.
9.
A systematic survey for the presence of plasmids in 17 different xenobiotic-degrading Sphingomonas strains was performed. In almost all analyzed strains, two to five plasmids with sizes of about 50 to 500 kb were detected by using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. A comparison of plasmid preparations untreated or treated with S1 nuclease suggested that, in general, Sphingomonas plasmids are circular. Hybridization experiments with labeled gene probes suggested that large plasmids are involved in the degradation of dibenzo-p-dioxin, dibenzofuran, and naphthalenesulfonates in S. wittichii RW1, Sphingomonas sp. HH69, and S. xenophaga BN6, respectively. The plasmids which are responsible for the degradation of naphthalene, biphenyl, and toluene by S. aromaticivorans F199 (pNL1) and of naphthalenesulfonates by S. xenophaga BN6 (pBN6) were site-specifically labeled with a kanamycin resistance cassette. The conjugative transfer of these labeled plasmids was attempted with various bacterial strains as putative recipient strains. Thus, a conjugative transfer of plasmid pBN6 from S. xenophaga BN6 to a cured mutant of strain BN6 and to Sphingomonas sp. SS3 was observed. The conjugation experiments with plasmid pNL1 suggested a broader host range of this plasmid, because it was transferred without any obvious structural changes to S. yanoikuyae B1, Sphingomonas sp. SS3, and S. herbicidovorans. In contrast, major plasmid rearrangements were observed in the transconjugants after the transfer of plasmid pNL1 to Sphingomonas sp. HH69 and of pBN6 to Sphingomonas sp. SS3. No indications for the transfer of a Sphingomonas plasmid to bacteria outside of the Sphingomonadaceae were obtained.  相似文献   

10.
Diverse bacterial taxa live in association with plants without causing deleterious effects. Previous analyses of phyllosphere communities revealed the predominance of few bacterial genera on healthy dicotyl plants, provoking the question of whether these commensals play a particular role in plant protection. Here, we tested two of them, Methylobacterium and Sphingomonas, with respect to their ability to diminish disease symptom formation and the proliferation of the foliar plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato DC3000 on Arabidopsis thaliana. Plants were grown under gnotobiotic conditions in the absence or presence of the potential antagonists and then challenged with the pathogen. No effect of Methylobacterium strains on disease development was observed. However, members of the genus Sphingomonas showed a striking plant-protective effect by suppressing disease symptoms and diminishing pathogen growth. A survey of different Sphingomonas strains revealed that most plant isolates protected A. thaliana plants from developing severe disease symptoms. This was not true for Sphingomonas strains isolated from air, dust, or water, even when they reached cell densities in the phyllosphere comparable to those of the plant isolates. This suggests that plant protection is common among plant-colonizing Sphingomonas spp. but is not a general trait conserved within the genus Sphingomonas. The carbon source profiling of representative isolates revealed differences between protecting and nonprotecting strains, suggesting that substrate competition plays a role in plant protection by Sphingomonas. However, other mechanisms cannot be excluded at this time. In conclusion, the ability to protect plants as shown here in a model system may be an unexplored, common trait of indigenous Sphingomonas spp. and may be of relevance under natural conditions.  相似文献   

11.
This study first described the composition and characteristics of culturable endophytic bacteria isolated from wild alpine-subnival plant species growing under extreme environmental conditions (i.e., on the border of a glacier with frequently fluctuating and freezing temperatures, strong wind, and high ultraviolet radiation). Using a cultivation-dependent approach and 16S rRNA gene amplification techniques, 93 bacterial isolates showing different phenotypic properties were obtained from 20 different subnival plant species, of which gram-positive bacteria (61.5%), psychrotolerant bacteria (67.3%), and pigmented isolates (70.9%) accounted for a large proportion. All these characteristics of endophytes were closely related to the survival environment of their host plants and were in good agreement with microbes occurring in other cold environments. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that the endophytic isolates consisted of five phylogenetic groups comprising α-proteobacteria, γ-proteobacteria, the high G+C content gram-positive bacteria, the low G+C content gram-positive bacteria, and Flavobacterium-Bacteroides-Cytophaga. The largest generic diversity was found in the HGC group, while Clavibacter, Agreia, Rhodococcus, Sphingomonas, and Pseudomonas were the most prevalent genera. Of all isolates, 46.4% showed a high sequence similarity (98-100%) to strains discovered from other cold environments such as glaciers, tundra, and polar seas. Furthermore, 36.4% of the isolates produced Indole-3-acetic acid and 76.3% were able to solubilize mineral phosphate, which revealed that endophytic bacteria with multiple physiological functions were abundant and widespread in subnival plants. These results are essential for understanding the ecological roles of endophytes and as a foundation for further studying the interactions with plants and environment.  相似文献   

12.
Physiological and phylogenetic diversity of bacteria growing on resin acids   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Resin acids are tricyclic diterpenes which are synthesized by trees and are a major cause of toxicity of pulp mill effluents. Bacterial strains isolated from three different sources and which grow on resin acids were physiologically characterized. Eleven strains, representating distinct groups, were further characterized physiologically and phylogenetically. The isolates had distinct specificities for use, as growth substrates, of the different resin acids tested. The isolates also used fatty acids but were generally limited in use of other diverse substrates tested. According to their 16S rDNA sequences, the representative isolates are related to members of the genera, Sphingomonas, Zoogloea, Ralstonia, Burkholderia, Pseudomonas and Mycobacterium. Analysis of whole-cell fatty acid profiles generally supported those phylogenetic relationships. However, most of the isolated did not have high similarities to reference strains in the Microbial Identification System database of fatty acid profiles or in the Biolog database of substrate oxidation patterns. Described species of Sphingomonas, Zoolgoea, Burkholderia Pseudomonas, most closely related to the isolates we characterized, failed to grow on, or degrade, resin acids. We propose recognition of Zoogloea resiniphila sp. nov., Pseudomonas vancouverensis sp. nov., P. abietaniphila sp. nov. and P. multiresinivorans sp. nov.  相似文献   

13.
Cellular fatty acid compositions of five psychrotolerant groundwater isolates representing alpha- and beta-Proteobacteria were studied at temperatures ranging from 8 to 25 degrees C. Unsaturation of straight-chain fatty acids was the most common response to decreasing temperature and was detected in four of the isolates. On solid media, decrease of temperature resulted in a decrease of cyclopropane fatty acids in beta-proteobacterial isolates. The formation of cyclopropane fatty acids depended, however, to a greater extent on the growth phase than the temperature and increased drastically as the cells entered stationary phase. The alpha-proteobacterial isolates contained a branched C(19:1) fatty acid. The formation of the branched C(19:1) increased during growth in the same way as the cyclopropane fatty acids in beta-proteobacterial strains, indicating possibly an analogous formation of the branched fatty acid by methylation of the 18:1 fatty acid. Sphingomonas sp. K6 possessed a novel temperature-induced modification of lipid fatty acids. As temperature decreased from 25 to 8 degrees C, the fatty acid composition shifted from predominantly even-carbon fatty acids to odd-carbon fatty acids. The results show completely different fatty acid modifications in two strains of the same genus Sphingomonas.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Since extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli (ExPEC) strains from human and avian hosts encounter similar challenges in establishing infection in extraintestinal locations, they may share similar contents of virulence genes and capacities to cause disease. In the present study, 1,074 ExPEC isolates were classified by phylogenetic group and possession of 67 other traits, including virulence-associated genes and plasmid replicon types. These ExPEC isolates included 452 avian pathogenic E. coli strains from avian colibacillosis, 91 neonatal meningitis E. coli (NMEC) strains causing human neonatal meningitis, and 531 uropathogenic E. coli strains from human urinary tract infections. Cluster analysis of the data revealed that most members of each subpathotype represent a genetically distinct group and have distinguishing characteristics. However, a genotyping cluster containing 108 ExPEC isolates was identified, heavily mixed with regard to subpathotype, in which there was substantial trait overlap. Many of the isolates within this cluster belonged to the O1, O2, or O18 serogroup. Also, 58% belonged to the ST95 multilocus sequence typing group, and over 90% of them were assigned to the B2 phylogenetic group typical of human ExPEC strains. This cluster contained strains with a high number of both chromosome- and plasmid-associated ExPEC genes. Further characterization of this ExPEC subset with zoonotic potential urges future studies exploring the potential for the transmission of certain ExPEC strains between humans and animals. Also, the widespread occurrence of plasmids among NMEC strains and members of the mixed cluster suggests that plasmid-mediated virulence in these pathotypes warrants further attention.  相似文献   

16.
Based on the results of a phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA and the presence of sphingoglycolipid in cellular lipids of the type strains, transfer of "Rhizomonas" suberifaciens, Blastomonas natatoria and Erythromonas ursincola to the genus Sphingomonas as Sphingomonas suberifaciens (van Bruggen et al 1990) comb. nov., Sphingomonas natatoria (Sly 1985) comb. nov., and Sphingomonas ursincola (Yurkov et al 1997) comb. nov. are herein proposed together with the emendation of genus Sphingomonas. The type strain of S. suberifaciens is van Bruggen Cal=ATCC 49382=NCPPB 3629=IFO 15211=JCM 8521, that of S. natatoria is ATCC 35951 =DSM 3183=NCIMB 12085=JCM10396, and that of S. ursincola is DSM 9006= KR-99.  相似文献   

17.
The Butyrivibrio group comprises Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens and related Gram-positive bacteria isolated mainly from the rumen of cattle and sheep. The aim of this study was to investigate phenotypic characteristics that discriminate between different phylotypes. The phylogenetic position, derived from 16S rDNA sequence data, of 45 isolates from different species and different countries was compared with their fermentation products, mechanism of butyrate formation, lipid metabolism and sensitivity to growth inhibition by linoleic acid (LA). Three clear sub-groups were evident, both phylogenetically and metabolically. Group VA1 typified most Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio isolates, while Groups VA2 and SA comprised Butyrivibrio hungatei and Clostridium proteoclasticum, respectively. All produced butyrate but strains of group VA1 had a butyrate kinase activity <40 U (mg protein)−1, while strains in groups VA2 and SA all exhibited activities >600 U (mg protein)−1. The butyrate kinase gene was present in all VA2 and SA bacteria tested but not in strains of group VA1, all of which were positive for the butyryl-CoA CoA-transferase gene. None of the bacteria tested possessed both genes. Lipase activity, measured by tributyrin hydrolysis, was high in group VA2 and SA strains and low in Group VA1 strains. Only the SA group formed stearic acid from LA. Linoleate isomerase activity, on the other hand, did not correspond with phylogenetic position. Group VA1 bacteria all grew in the presence of 200 μg LA ml−1, while members of Groups VA2 and SA were inhibited by lower concentrations, some as low as 5 μg ml−1. This information provides strong links between phenotypic and phylogenetic properties of this group of clostridial cluster XIVa Gram-positive bacteria.  相似文献   

18.
A bacterial culture was isolated from a manufactured gas plant (MGP) soil based on its ability to metabolize the nitrogen-containing heterocycle carbazole. The culture was identified as a Sphingomonas sp. and was given the designation GTIN11. A cloned 4.2kb DNA fragment was confirmed to contain genes responsible for carbazole degradation. DNA sequence analysis revealed that the fragment contained five open reading frames (ORFs) with the deduced amino acid sequence showing homology to; carbazole terminal dioxygenase (ORF1), 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase subunits (ORF2 and ORF3), meta-cleavage compound hydrolases (ORF4), and ferrodoxin component of bacterial multicomponent dioxygenases (ORF5). The percent similarity was 61% of these proteins or less to known proteins. The specific activity of Sphingomonas sp. GTIN11 for the degradation of carbazole at 37 degrees C was determined to be 8.0 micromol carbazole degraded/min/g dry cell. This strain is unique in expressing the carbazole degradation trait constitutively. Resting cells of Sphingomonas sp. GTIN11 removed 95% of carbazole and 50% of C1-carbazoles from petroleum in a 16-h treatment time.  相似文献   

19.
Eleven carbazole (CAR)-degrading bacterial strains were isolated from seawater collected off the coast of Japan using two different media. Seven isolates were shown to be most closely related to the genera Erythrobacter, Hyphomonas, Sphingosinicella, Caulobacter , and Lysobacter . Meanwhile, strains OC3, OC6S, OC9, and OC11S showed low similarity to known bacteria, the closest relative being Kordiimonas gwangyangensis GW14-5 (90% similarity). Southern hybridization analysis revealed that only five isolates carried car genes similar to those reported in Pseudomonas resinovorans CA10 ( car CA10) or Sphingomonas sp. strain KA1 ( car KA1). The isolates were subjected to GC-MS and the results indicated that these strains degrade CAR to anthranilic acid.  相似文献   

20.
Seven aerobic bacterial strains capable of degrading several of the monocyclic aromatic compounds occurring in the phenolic fraction of olive-mill wastewaters (OMWs) were isolated from an Italian OMW. The results of the 16S rDNA restriction analysis evidenced that these strains are distributed among four different groups. One strain of each group was taxonomically characterized by sequencing the amplified 16S rDNA, and the four strains were assigned to the genera Comamonas (strain AV1A), Ralstonia (strain AV5BG), Pseudomonas (strain AV2A) and Sphingomonas (strain AV6C). The four strains, when checked for the ability to degrade nine monocyclic aromatic compounds abundant in OMWs, were found to significantly metabolize five to eight of them, both as resting cells and growing cells. Specific enzyme analyses of the same selected strains showed: (1) the occurrence of O-demethylating activities towards four methoxylated mono-aromatic acids in three of the four studied strains (strains AV1A, AV5BG and AV6C), (2) ring-cleavage activity towards protocatechuic acid in all of the strains, and (3) a ring-cleavage activity towards catechol in strain AV6C. The isolates described here exhibit a biodegradation potential towards monocyclic aromatic compounds of OMWs that is markedly broader and higher than that displayed by other aerobic bacteria described previously. These features make them excellent candidates for removing the low-molecular-weight phenolic compounds persisting in the effluent following anaerobic digestion of OMWs.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号