A novel Gram-negative, aerobic and moderately thermophilic bacterium, strain 4BON(T), was isolated from a non-water-flooded Australian terrestrial oil reservoir. Cells were non-spore-forming straight rods, which were motile by means of a polar flagellum. The optimum growth conditions were 55 degrees C, pH 6.9 and 0.5 % NaCl. Strain 4BON(T) was oxidase- and catalase-positive; it grew on fumarate, pyruvate, succinate, formate, ethanol and yeast extract in the presence of oxygen or nitrate as terminal electron acceptor. Nitrate was reduced to nitrous oxide. The DNA G+C content of the strain was 58.6 mol%. The closest phylogenetic relative of strain 4BON(T) was Hydrogenophilus thermoluteolus (similarity of 91.8 %), of the beta-Proteobacteria. As strain 4BON(T) is physiologically and phylogenetically different from H. thermoluteolus, it is proposed that it be assigned to a novel species of a novel genus, Petrobacter succinatimandens gen. nov., sp. nov. The type strain is 4BON(T) (=DSM 15512(T)=CIP 107790(T)).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.02732-0 | DOI Listing |
Int J Syst Evol Microbiol
January 2014
Institute of Life Sciences, Department of Biotechnology, Nalco Square, Bhubaneswar-751 023, India.
Comparative phenotypic, chemotaxonomic and genetic analysis revealed significant similarities among strains of the genera Tepidiphilus and Petrobacter. Analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences and DNA-DNA relatedness of the type strains Tepidiphilus margaritifer N2-214(T) and Petrobacter succinatimandens 4BON(T) showed sequence similarity of 98.9 % and less than 40 % relatedness, indicating that these strains represent different species of same genus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Syst Evol Microbiol
May 2004
IRD, UR 101 Extrêmophiles, IFR-BAIM, Universités de Provence et de la Méditerranée, ESIL, Marseille, France.
A novel Gram-negative, aerobic and moderately thermophilic bacterium, strain 4BON(T), was isolated from a non-water-flooded Australian terrestrial oil reservoir. Cells were non-spore-forming straight rods, which were motile by means of a polar flagellum. The optimum growth conditions were 55 degrees C, pH 6.
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