Isolation and characterization of a Geobacillus thermoleovorans strain from an ultra-deep South African gold mine
Publication Year
2007
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
A thermophilic facultative bacterial isolate was recovered from 3.2 km depth in a gold mine in South Africa. This isolate, designated GE-7, was cultivated from pH 8.0, 50 °C water from a dripping fracture near the top of an exploration tunnel. GE-7 grows optimally at 65 °C and pH 6.5 on a wide range of carbon substrates including cellobiose, hydrocarbons and lactate. In addition to O2, GE-7 also utilizes nitrate as an electron acceptor. GE-7 is a long rod-shaped bacterium (4-6 μm long×0.5 μm wide) with terminal endospores and flagella. Phylogenetic analysis of GE-7 16S rDNA sequence revealed high sequence similarity with G. thermoleovorans DSM 5366T (99.6%), however, certain phenotypic characteristics of GE-7 were distinct from this and other previously described strains of G. thermoleovorans. © 2006 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
Keywords
carbon,
cellobiose,
DNA 16S,
Gold,
hydrocarbon,
lactic acid,
Article,
bacterial flagellum,
bacterial growth,
bacterial strain,
bacterium isolate,
bacterium isolation,
DNA sequence,
Geobacillus thermoleovorans,
mining,
nonhuman,
nucleotide sequence,
pH,
phenotype,
phylogeny,
priority journal,
sequence homology,
South Africa,
thermophilic bacterium,
Bacilli (class),
Bacteria (microorganisms),
Geobacillus thermoleovorans
Journal
Systematic and Applied Microbiology
Volume
30
Pages
152-164