The tolerance patterns, expressed as MICs, for 250 moderately halophilic eubacteria to 10 heavy metals were surveyed by using an agar dilution method. The moderate halophiles tested included 12 culture collection strains and fresh isolates representative of Deleya halophila (37 strains), Acinetobacter sp. (24 strains), Flavobacterium sp. (28 strains), and 149 moderately halophilic gram-positive cocci included in the genera Marinococcus, Sporosarcina, Micrococcus, and Staphylococcus. On the basis of the MICs, the collection strains showed, overall, similar responses to silver, cobalt, mercury, nickel, lead, and zinc. All were sensitive to silver, mercury, and zinc and tolerant of lead. The response to arsenate, cadmium, chromium, and copper was very heterogeneous. The metal susceptibility levels of the 238 freshly isolated strains were, in general, very heterogeneous among the four taxonomic groups as well as within the strains included in each group. The highest toxicities were found with mercury, silver, and zinc, while arsenate showed the lowest activity. All these strains were tolerant of nickel, lead, and chromium and sensitive to silver and mercury. Acinetobacter sp. strains were the most heavy-metal tolerant, with the majority of them showing tolerance of eight different metal ions. In contrast, Flavobacterium sp. strains were the most metal sensitive. The influence of salinity and yeast extract concentrations of the culture medium on the toxicity of the heavy metals tested for some representative strains was also studied. Lowering the salinity, in general, led to enhanced sensitivity to cadmium and, in some cases, to cobalt and copper. However, increasing the salinity resulted in only a slight decrease in the cadmium, copper, and nickel toxicities. Reduction in the yeast extract concentration resulted in an increased sensitivity to all metals, especially when this component was lowered to 0.01% (wt/vol). In contrast, a higher concentration only slightly lessened the toxicities of nickel and zinc.
Some species of extremely halophilic archaebacteria, Halobacteriaceae, have been shown to accumulate large amounts of poly(P-hydroxybutyrate) under conditions of nitrogen limitation and abundant carbon source. The production of poly(P3-hydroxybutyrate), at least in large quantities, was restricted to two carbohydrate-utilizing species, Halobacterium mediterranei and H. volcanii. In addition to the nutrients in the media, the salt concentration also influenced poly(P-hydroxybutyrate) accumulation, which was greater at lower salt concentrations. The possible application of these microorganisms for the production of biodegradable plastics is discussed.
Three cryptic plasmids have been isolated from moderately halophilic eubacteria belonging to three species of the genus Halomonas. These three plasmids were designated pHE1 (4.2 kb, isolated from H. elongata ATCC 33174), pHI1 (48 kb, isolated from "H. israelensis" ATCC 43985), and pHS1 (ca. 70 kb, isolated from H. subglaciescola UQM 2927). Because of its small size, the plasmid pHE1 was selected for further characterization and construction of a shuttle vector for Halomonas strains. pHE1 was cloned into pBluescript KS and a detailed restriction map was constructed. Hybridization experiments excluded the existence of sequences homologous to pHE1 in total DNA from other strains of the genus Halomonas. Moreover, no DNA homology with pMH1, the only plasmid described so far from moderate halophiles, was found. Since pHE1 appeared to be unable to replicate in Escherichia coli cells, a number of mobilizable pHE1-derived hybrid plasmids were constructed that could be selected and maintained both in E. coli and in H. elongata. Finally, an improved shuttle vector, pHS15, was generated. The vector pHS15 contains an origin of replication from E. coli as well as one from H. elongata, a streptomycin resistance gene for positive selection in moderate halophiles, a number of unique restriction sites commonly used for cloning, and the mobilization functions of the broad host range IncP plasmid RK2. The vector pHS15 was readily mobilized by the RK2 derivative pRK2013 to all Halomonas strains tested so far. This is the first report on the development of a cloning vector useful for moderately halophilic eubacteria.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.