The terminal oxidases of the respiratory chain of seven strains of gram-negative bacteria were shown to be involved in the reduction of tellurite. The rate of tellurite reduction correlated with the intensity of respiration. The inhibitors of terminal oxidases, carbon monoxide and cyanide, inhibited the reduction of tellurite. In Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO ML4262 and P. aeruginosa PAO ML4262 (pBS 10), the respiratory chain was found to contain three types of cytochrome c, one of which (the carbon monoxide-binding cytochrome c) was involved in the reduction of tellurite. Agrobacterium tumefaciens VKM B-1219, P. aeruginosa IBPM B-13, and Escherichia coli G0-102bd++ cells contained oxidases aa3, bb3, and bd, respectively. The respiratory chain of other strains contained two oxidases: E. coli DH5alpha of bb3- and bd-type, and Erwinia carotovora VKM B-567 of bo3- and bd-type. All the strains under study reduced tellurite with the formation of tellurium crystallites. Depending on the position of the active center of terminal oxidases in the plasma membrane, the crystallites appeared either in the periplasmic space [P. aeruginosa PAO ML4262 and P. aeruginosa PAO ML4262 (pBS10)], or on the outer surface of the membrane (A. tumefaciens VKM B-1219 and P. aeruginosa IBPM B-13), its inner surface (E. coli G0-102bd++), or on both surfaces (E. coli DHaalpha and E. carotovora VKM B-567).
Cultivation of Mycobacterium smegmatis cells in a nitrogen-limited minimal medium (SR-1) followed by prolonged storage at room temperature without shaking resulted in the gradual accumulation of morphologically distinct ovoid forms characterized by (i) low metabolic activity; (ii) elevated resistance to antibiotics and to heat treatment; and (iii) inability to produce colonies on standard agar plates (non-platable cells). Detailed microscopic examination confirmed that ovoid cells possessed an intact cell envelope, specific fine structure and large electron-transparent bodies in the cytoplasm. Cell staining with Nile red and analysis of the lipid content by TLC revealed the presence of significant amounts of apolar lipids in these bodies. The ovoid forms could be stored for significant periods (up to 5 months) and resuscitated afterwards in a modified Sauton's medium. Importantly, resuscitation of ovoid cells was accompanied by their transformation into the typical rod-shaped cells. We suggest that the observed ovoid cells represent dormant forms, resembling morphologically distinct cells of Mycobacterium tuberculosis previously isolated from tuberculosis patients and infected animals.
A thermotolerant, Gram-positive, aerobic, endospore-forming, acidophilic bacterium (strain Kr1 T )was isolated from the pulp of a gold-containing sulfide concentrate processed at 40 6C in a gold-recovery plant (Siberia
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