Seven strains of the genus Sphaerotilus were obtained from natural thermal sulfide (strains D-501(T), D-502, D-504, D-505 and D-507) and low-temperature ferrous (strain HS(T)) springs and from an activated sludge system (strain D-380). These Sphaerotilus isolates and strains of Sphaerotilus natans obtained from the DSMZ (S. natans DSM 6575(T), DSM 565 and DSM 566) were studied using a polyphasic taxonomic approach. All strains had Q-8 as the major quinone and C(16 : 1)ω7, C(16 : 0) and C(18 : 1)ω7 as the major fatty acids. The DNA-DNA hybridization results and 16S rRNA, hsp60 and gyrB gene sequencing experiments showed that isolates D-501(T), D-502, D-504, D-505, D-507 and D-380 were closely related to the type strain of S. natans DSM 6575(T). However, strains D-501(T), D-502, D-504, D-505 and D-507 significantly differed from the heterotrophic strain S. natans DSM 6575(T) by their capability for lithotrophic growth with reduced sulfur compounds as an electron donor for energy conservation and some other phenotypic features. For this reason, strains D-501(T), D-502, D-504, D-505 and D-507 merit a separate taxonomic classification at the subspecies level. The name Sphaerotilus natans subsp. sulfidivorans subsp. nov. (type strain D-501(T) = DSM 22545(T) = VKM B-2573(T)) is proposed. The subspecies Sphaerotilus natans subsp. natans subsp. nov. is automatically created as a result of this proposal. Strain D-380 was phenotypically closely related to S. natans DSM 6575(T). Strains D-380 and S. natans DSM 6575(T) were assigned to the subspecies Sphaerotilus natans subsp. natans subsp. nov. (type strain DSM 6575(T) = ATCC 13338(T)). The 16S rRNA, hsp60 and gyrB gene sequences obtained for strains HS(T) and DSM 565 showed very low sequence similarity values of 97.3 %, 89.7 % and 88.4 %, respectively, with S. natans DSM 6575(T). Strain HS(T) shared 99 % DNA-DNA relatedness with strain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.023887-0 | DOI Listing |
Arch Microbiol
May 2021
Institute of Bioengineering, Research Center of Biotechnology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 119071, Moscow, Russia.
Filamentous iron oxides accumulating bacteria Sphaerotilus natans subsp. natans and S. natans subsp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Resour Announc
November 2019
New England BioLabs, Inc., Ipswich, Massachusetts, USA.
subsp. D-507 is an environmental isolate from a sulfate spring in the northern Caucasus region of Russia. This heterotrophic bacterium is involved in the oxidation of reduced sulfur derivatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe lithotrophic capacity of the betaproteobacteria Sphaerotilus natans subsp. sulfidivorans was confirmed at genetic level: functional genes of sulfur metabolism were detected (aprBA, soxB, and sqr, coding for adenylyl phosphosulfate reductase, thiosulfate-cleaving enzyme, and sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase, respectively), and the expression of aprA and soxB genes was demonstrated. An evolutionary scenario for soxB genes in Sphaerotilus representatives is suggested based on comparative analysis of codon occurrence frequency, DNA base composition (G + C content), and topology of phylogenetic trees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Syst Evol Microbiol
April 2011
Department of Biology, University of Voronezh, Universitetskaya pl. 1, 394006 Voronezh, Russia.
Seven strains of the genus Sphaerotilus were obtained from natural thermal sulfide (strains D-501(T), D-502, D-504, D-505 and D-507) and low-temperature ferrous (strain HS(T)) springs and from an activated sludge system (strain D-380). These Sphaerotilus isolates and strains of Sphaerotilus natans obtained from the DSMZ (S. natans DSM 6575(T), DSM 565 and DSM 566) were studied using a polyphasic taxonomic approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Syst Evol Microbiol
September 2002
Division of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Yokohama National University, Hodogaya, Japan.
Two bacterial strains that are able to grow specifically on the sheath of a sheathed filamentous bacterium, Sphaerotilus natans, were isolated from soil samples. The sheath-degrading organisms, designated strains TB(T) and TK, are facultatively anaerobic and form endospores. The Gram reaction was negative at all stages of cultivation.
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