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Polyphasic Detection of Cyanobacteria in Terrestrial Biofilms
Authors:Christine C Gaylarde  Peter M Gaylarde  Janine Copp  Brett Neilan
Institution:1. Department of Biophysics , Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS) , Avenue Bento Gon?alves 9500, Porto Alegre – RS, 91501-970, Brazil;2. MIRCEN/UFRGS , Brazil cgaylarde@yahoo.com;4. MIRCEN/UFRGS , Brazil;5. School of Microbiology and Immunology , University of New South Wales , Sydney, 2052, NSW, Australia
Abstract:Cyanobacterial populations detected on buildings by traditional methods are mainly filamentous, whereas direct microscopy shows that they are principally coccoid morphotypes that often cannot be isolated in culture, but may grow on artificial media when the spatial biofilm relationships are maintained. The polyphasic strategy described here was to select morphologically distinct colonies from rehydrated biofilms for direct DNA amplification, allowing uncultured organisms to be sequenced and their morphology to be characterized by microscopy. DNA data banks currently contain many entries for cyanobacteria of unrecorded morphology, which does not facilitate identification, although genetic variability in a population may be assessed. The sequence homologies of the present biofilm organisms (EMBL accession numbers AJ619681 to 619690) with those in DNA databanks were low, indicating differences between xerophytic cyanobacteria on walls and aquatic species comprising the majority in the databases. Further development of databases for the populations found in this environment, subject to temperature extremes, repeated desiccation and high UV and salt levels, is required.
Keywords:biofilms  cyanobacteria  extreme environments  historic buildings  PCR  polyphasic methods
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