Aims: To characterize the bioemulsifier produced by a nonfluorescent strain of Pseudomonas putida isolated from a polluted sediment and to determine the influence of pH, temperature, media composition, and carbon and nitrogen source on growth and emulsifying activity.
Methods And Results: Different indexes were employed to determine the emulsifying properties of culture supernatants of P. putida ML2 in defined and complex media.
Ibicella lutea is a 'quasi-carnivorous' plant that grows wild in Uruguay where it is used in popular medicine as an antiseptic for eye and skin infections. In an earlier screening, it showed a broad antibacterial spectrum. From the chloroform extract of the plant the main antibacterial compound has now been isolated and identified by several MS and NMR methods as a new compound, 11-O-(6'-O-acetyl-beta-D-glucopyranosyl)-stearic acid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new anaerobic, proteolytic, moderately thermophilic bacterium, strain 3RT, was isolated from a methanogenic mesophilic reactor treating protein-rich wastewater. The cells were Gram-negative, non-spore-forming, non-motile rods. The DNA base composition was 43 mol% G + C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Syst Bacteriol
July 1997
A new moderately thermophilic proteolytic anaerobe, strain UT, was isolated from mesophilic granular methanogenic sludge. The cells were spore-forming, motile rods that were 0.4 micron wide and 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn an attempt to isolate the superoxide dismutase (SOD) gene from the anaerobic sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfoarculus baarsii, a DNA fragment was isolated which functionally complemented an Escherichia coli mutant (sodA sodB) deficient in cytoplasmic SODs. This region carries two open reading frames with sequences which are very similar to that of the rbo-rub operon from Desulfovibrio vulgaris. Independent expression of the rbo and rub genes from ptac showed that expression of rbo was responsible for the observed phenotype.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWorld J Microbiol Biotechnol
November 1992
The sludge of an anaerobic lagoon treating the wastewater from a factory producing baker's yeast was evaluated as inoculum for anaerobic digestion. Specific methanogenic activity tests failed to give a good estimation of the trophic groups that were evidenced by enumerations involving Most Probable Number estimations. This failure was ascribed to the toxic effects of either the acetate concentrations used or to the ammonia content of the sludge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComputer programs were developed for the selection of a minimum set of biochemical tests that allow the identification of the species of Enterobacteriaceae with major clinical significance. The system proposed consists of nine conventional biochemical tests, the results of which are interpreted with the help of a numeric code. This selects the most probable species for each result and, when necessary, additional tests can be performed to confirm the identification proposed.
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