Thermobaculum terrenum gen. nov., sp. nov.: a non-phototrophic gram-positive thermophile representing an environmental clone group related to the Chloroflexi (green non-sulfur bacteria) and Thermomicrobia
Lina M. Botero, Kathy B. Brown, Sue Brumefield, Mark Burr,
Richard W. Castenholz, Mark Young, Timothy R. McDermott
Archives of Microbiology, 2004
Abstract
A novel bacterium was cultivated from an extreme
thermal soil in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming,
USA, that at the time of sampling had a pH of 3.9 and a
temperature range of 65–92 °C. This organism was found
to be an obligate aerobic, non-spore-forming rod, and formed
pink-colored colonies. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S
rRNA gene sequence placed this organism in a clade composed
entirely of environmental clones most closely related
to the phyla Chloroflexi and Thermomicrobia. This
bacterium stained gram-positive, contained a novel fattyacid
profile, had cell wall muramic acid content similar to
that of Bacillus subtilis (significantly greater than Escherichia
coli), and failed to display a lipopolysaccharide
profile in SDS-polyacrylamide gels that would be indicative
of a gram-negative cell wall structure. Ultrastructure
examinations with transmission electron microscopy showed
a thick cell wall (approximately 34 nm wide) external to a
cytoplasmic membrane. The organism was not motile under
the culture conditions used, and electron microscopic
examination showed no evidence of flagella. Genomic
G+C content was 56.4 mol%, and growth was optimal at
67 °C and at a pH of 7.0. This organism was able to grow
heterotrophically on various carbon compounds, would
use only oxygen as an electron acceptor, and its growth
was not affected by light. A new species of a novel genus
is proposed, with YNP1T (T=type strain) being Thermobaculum
terrenum gen. nov., sp. nov. (16S rDNA gene
GenBank accession AF391972). This bacterium has been
deposited in the American Type Culture Collection
(ATCC BAA-798) and the University of Oregon Culture
Collection of Microorganisms from Extreme Environments
(CCMEE 7001).
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