Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

agricultural and biological sciences

Fusibacter fontis sp. Nov., a sulfur-reducing, anaerobic bacterium isolated from a mesothermic Tunisian spring

International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, Volume 65, No. 10, Year 2015

Strain KhalAKB1T, a mesophilic, anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium, was isolated from water collected from a mesothermic Tunisian spring. Cells were Gram-staining-positive rods, occurring singly or in pairs and motile by one lateral flagellum. Strain KhalAKB1Tgrew at 15-45 °C (optimum 30 °C), at pH 5.5-8.5 (optimum pH 7.0) and in the presence of 0-35 g NaCl1-1 (optimum 1 g NaCl1-1). It fermented yeast extract and a wide range of carbohydrates including cellobiose, D-glucose, D-ribose, sucrose, D-xylose, maltose, D-galactose and starch as electron donors. Acetate, ethanol, CO2 and H2 were end products of glucose metabolism. It reduced elemental sulfur, but not sulfate, thiosulfate or sulfite, into sulfide. The DNA G + C content was 37.6 mol%. The predominant cellular fatty acids were C14 : 0 and C16 : 0. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequence suggested Fusibacter bizertensis as the closest relative of this isolate (identity of 97.2% to the type strain). Based on phenotypic, phylogenetic and genotypic taxonomic characteristics, strain KhalAKB1T is proposed to be assigned to a novel species within the genus Fusibacter, order Clostridiales, Fusibacter fontis sp. nov. The type strain is KhalAKB1T (=DSM 28450T=JCM 19912T).
Statistics
Citations: 33
Authors: 7
Affiliations: 2
Identifiers
Research Areas
Environmental
Genetics And Genomics