scholarly journals Adaptation of Carbon Source Utilization Patterns of Geobacter metallireducens During Sessile Growth

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sviatlana Marozava ◽  
Juliane Merl-Pham ◽  
Hubert Müller ◽  
Rainer U. Meckenstock
2001 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 2799-2809 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Michael Lehman ◽  
Frederick S. Colwell ◽  
Greg A. Bala

ABSTRACT Bench scale column studies were used to examine the partitioning of microorganisms between groundwater and a geologic medium and to examine the effect of hydrogeology (i.e., porous- versus fracture-flow) on organism partitioning. Replicated columns were constructed with intact basalt core segments that contained natural fractures and with the same basalt crushed into particles. The columns were perfused with groundwater, and upon reaching a steady state, the columns were sacrificed and the attached and unattached communities were analyzed by multiple approaches. The analyses included the total number of cells, the phylogenetic affiliation of the cells (i.e., the α, β, and γ subclasses of the class Proteobacteria and gram positives with high G+C DNA content) by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), number and taxonomic affiliation by fatty acid methyl ester profiles of culturable heterotrophs, most-probable-number estimates of methanotrophs and phenol oxidizers, and whole-community sole carbon source utilization patterns from Biolog GN microplates. In the packed columns, about 99% of the total biomass (per cubic centimeter of porous medium) was attached to the geologic medium. Lack of equitable units precluded a comparison of attached and unattached biomasses in the fractured columns where the attached biomass was expressed per unit of surface area. Compositional differences in the attached and unattached communities were evidenced by (i) the recovery ofPseudomonas stutzeri, an Enterococcus sp., andBacillus psychrophilus from the groundwater and not from the basalt, (ii) differences between community carbon source utilization patterns, and (iii) the relative abundances of different phylogenetic groups estimated by FISH in both column types. In the packed columns, attached communities were depleted of members of the α- and β-Proteobacteria subclasses in comparison to those in the corresponding groundwater. In the fractured columns, attached communities were enriched in gram-positive Bacteriaand γ-Proteobacteria and depleted of β-Proteobacteria, in comparison to those in the corresponding groundwater. Segregation of populations and their activities, possibly modified by attachment to geologic media, may influence contaminant fate and transport in the subsurface and impact other in situ applications.


1998 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 913-919 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petra M Becker ◽  
Ulrich Stottmeister

Biolog community-level sole-carbon-source utilization patterns are widely applied to distinguish between the microbiota of different habitats or reveal disturbances in microbial ecosystems. Our objective was to examine whether the metabolic diversity measured in the Biolog system could be related to community functioning, thus providing more information than being merely discriminative for communities. To answer this question, we compared the percentages of specific pollutant utilizers with the percentages of the degraders of distinct general (Biolog) substrates in arbitrary samples of isolates, employing in both cases the isolate sample assay (ISA). Samples for arbitrarily selected isolates were taken from in situ enclosures situated in the anaerobic lignite-carbonization effluent Lake Schwelvollert (district of Weißenfels, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany). A different aerobic-carbonization wastewater treatment was carried out in each of the in situ enclosures. It was shown that distinct arbitrarily compiled isolate samples, which displayed similar functional patterns in terms of the degradation of pollutant-related compounds, exhibited significantly different general metabolic capacities as measured using Biolog kits. The similar pollutant-degradation potentials of the arbitrary isolates indicated that the site's substrate supply plays an important role in deciding which bacteria can become indigenous, seemingly leaving room for the otherwise varying properties of the individual community members.Key words: lignite-carbonization wastewater, ISA (isolate sample assay), sole-carbon-source utilization, Biolog, community functioning.


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