Formation of Fatty Acid-Degrading, Anaerobic Granules by Defined Species |
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Authors: | W. Wu M. K. Jain J. G. Zeikus |
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Abstract: | An endospore-forming, butyrate-degrading bacterium (strain BH) was grown on butyrate in monoxenic coculture with a methanogen. The culture formed dense aggregates when Methanobacterium formicicum was the methanogenic partner, but the culture was turbid when Methanospirillum hungatei was the partner. In contrast, a propionate-degrading, lemon-shaped bacterium (strain PT) did not form aggregates with Methanobacterium formicicum unless an acetate-degrading Methanosaeta sp. was also included in the culture. Fatty acid-degrading methanogenic granules were formed in a laboratory-scale upflow reactor at 35(deg)C fed with a medium containing a mixture of acetate, propionate, and butyrate by using defined cultures of Methanobacterium formicicum T1N, Methanosaeta sp. strain M7, Methanosarcina mazei T18, propionate-degrading strain PT, and butyrate-degrading strain BH. The maximum substrate conversion rates of these granules for acetate, propionate, and butyrate were 43, 9, and 17 mmol/g (dry weight)/day, respectively. The average size of the granules was about 1 mm. Electron microscopic observation of the granules revealed that the cells of Methanobacterium formicicum, Methanosaeta sp., butyrate-degrading, and propionate-degrading bacteria were dispersed in the granules. Methanosarcina mazei existed inside the granules as aggregates of its own cells, which were associated with the bulk of the granules. The interaction of different species in aggregate formation and granule formation is discussed in relation to polymer formation of the cell surface. |
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