1. The hunt for the G-bacteria in activated sludge biomass
- Author
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Barbara M. McDougall, Gavin N. Rees, Robert J. Seviour, Bharat K. C. Patel, and A. M. Maszenan
- Subjects
culture medium ,Environmental Engineering ,sequence analysis ,phenotype ,Sequence analysis ,ribosome DNA ,DNA sequence ,bacterium culture ,DNA sequences ,Negibacteria ,Gram negative bacerium ,Microbiology ,060501 Bacteriology ,Amaricoccus ,Coccoidea ,Genus ,Botany ,G-bacteria ,Biomass ,Coccoid bacteria ,Bacteria (microorganisms) ,Alphaproteobacteria ,Water Science and Technology ,Gram ,nonhuman ,Bacteria ,biology ,Activated sludge process ,carbon ,poly(3 hydroxbutyric acid) ,Australia ,polyphosphate ,060500 MICROBIOLOGY ,bacterium ,Macao ,biology.organism_classification ,Sewage treatment plants ,060000 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES ,Activated sludge ,Genes ,Italy ,Posibacteria ,Proteobacteria ,micromanipulation - Abstract
La Trobe University Faculty of Science, Technology and Engineering Murray Darling Freshwater Research CentreMDFRC item.Routine microscopic examination of biomass samples from many activated sludge plants around the world reveals the presence of large numbers of both Gram positive and Gram negative coccoid cells often arranged in distinctive tetrads or sheets of tetrads. Three Gram negative tetrad cocci were successfully isolated into pure culture using micromanipulation from samples of biomass from plants in Tamworth, N.S.W., Australia, Verona, Italy and Macau. After extensive phenotypic characterisation and 16S rDNA sequence analysis, all isolates showed high overall similarity to each other, but were phylogenetically quite different to any previously sequenced bacterium. They have therefore been classified as three species of a new genus, the genus Amaricoccus in the a Proteobacteria in the domain Bacteria. None could accumulate polyphosphate granules, and production of intracellular poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) granules depended on the carbon source used in the medium. A similar characterisation of the original isolate of the G-bacteria described by Cech and Hartman showed this organism also belonged to the same genus as the other three isolates, but as a distinct species. The practical implications of these observations are discussed.
- Published
- 2023
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