AI Article Synopsis

  • A study on UV resistance in bacteria from the marine cyanobacterium Moorea producens revealed that certain strains, specifically Bacillus licheniformis, exhibit notable UV resistance for the first time, raising concerns about the effectiveness of UV sterilization methods.
  • Isolates collected from various Kenyan coastal sites showed that B. licheniformis had the highest UV resistance, with the order of resistance being Bacilli > γ proteobacteria > Actinobacteria, independent of pigmentation.
  • The research suggests that while some bacteria can survive UV exposure, further study is needed to understand the mechanisms behind this resistance and its implications for bacteria living in association with cyanobacteria.

Article Abstract

UV resistance of bacteria isolated from the marine cyanobacterium Moorea producens has not been observed previously, findings which highlight how unsafe germicidal UV irradiation for sterilization of air, food, and water could be. Further, UV resistance of Bacillus licheniformis is being observed for the first time. This study focused on bacteria isolated from the marine cyanobacterium M. producens collected off the Kenyan coast at Shimoni, Wasini, Kilifi, and Mida. UV irradiance of isolates (302 nm, 70 W/m , 0-1 hr) established B. licheniformis as the most UV resistant strain, with the following order of taxon resistance: Bacilli> γ proteobacteria > Actinobacteria. UV resistance was independent of pigmentation. The maximum likelihood phylogenetic distance determined for both B. licheniformis and Bacillus aerius relative to M. producens CCAP 1446/4 was 2.0. Survival of B. licheniformis upon UV irradiance followed first-order kinetics (k = 0.035/min, R  = 0.88). Addition of aqueous extracts (2, 10, 20 and 40 mg/ml) of this B. licheniformis strain on the less resistant Marinobacterium stanieri was not significant, however, the commercial sunscreen benzophenone-3 (BP-3) positive control and the time of irradiance were significant. Detection of bacteria on M. producens filaments stained with acridine orange confirmed its nonaxenic nature. Although the chemistry of UV resistance in cyanobacteria has been studied in depth revealing for example the role of mycosporine like amino acids (MAAs) in UV resistance less is known about how bacteria resist UV irradiation. This is of interest since cyanobacteria live in association with bacteria.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6460272PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mbo3.697DOI Listing

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