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Macromonas bipunctata |
Macromonas bipunctata is a Gram-negative, colorless, and heterotrophic sulfur bacterium of the genus Macromonas [1]. It is commonly found in sewage aeration tanks and caves where moonmilk has formed.[1][2] In the 1920s, researcher Gicklhorn first discovered this organism under the name Pseudomonas bipunctata.[2] After further study and culturing by Utermöhl and Koppe, in 1923, it was later renamed Macromonas bipunctata.[2] This organism is thought to be non-pathogenic species. In fact, the moonmilk produced was referenced as a remedy for infections in the Middle Ages.[3][4]
Background
[edit]History
[edit]In the Middle Ages "moon milk" was used as a medicine.[5][6] People often used it to cure infections and accelerate the healing process.[6][5] "Moon milk" is more than simply Macromonas bipunctata.[6][5] It also contains populations of cyanobacteria, fungi, green algae and actinomycetes, which are the main producers of antibiotics.[6][5] This could explain why it was effective as a potential agent for healing.
Etymology
[edit]M. bipunctata was first isolated by Gicklhorn in the slime of a large basin Gratz in a botanical garden in 1924.[1][2][4][7] Gicklhorn treated this species as a colorless sulfur bacteria and called it Pseudomonas bipunctata.[4][7] The Greek root "monad/monas" was commonly used for microbiology to indicate a unicellular or single unit organism(s)/bacterium in the 1920s. Furthermore, bipunctata can be separated into the Latin roots "bi", meaning two, and "punctata" , meaning spotted, as seen in cultured M. bipunctata.
Years later, Dubinina, Grabovich, and La Rivière isolated this species from the precipitates of sewage aeration tanks called the white mat. Upon more research of this organism, it was renamed Macromonas bipunctata.[1] "Macro" is the Greek term for large, as the cell itself is on average larger than most bacteria. Additionally, this species can also be found in many caves where moonmilk is present.[6][5][1]
Microbiology
[edit]Macromonas bipunctata is a Gram-negative, aerobic, irregular/pear shaped, heterotrophic sulfur bacterium.[1][2] M. bipunctata has a very large cell area at 9 µm x 20 µm .[1][2] Its motility consists of a with a flagella 20-40 µm long that moves around using a structural beam of polar flagella located at one end of its body.
Phylogeny and Taxonomy
[edit]The closest species to Macromonas bipunctata within the class Betaproteobacteria are Malikia granosa and Malikia spinosa based on 16S rRNA gene as shown in many previous studies. Malikia nests within the family Comamonadaceae in the phylum Proteobacteria and is also aerobic.[3][2] Malikia granosa has a 96.5% similarity to M. bipunctata, whereas Hydrogenophaga flava has a 95.61% similarity in its 16S rRNA gene.[8]
Culturing
[edit]Most of the culturing procedures model Dubinina and Grabovich's 1984 article on M. bipunctata: it includes sodium acetate (1 g/L), calcium chloride (0.1 g/L), casein hydrolysate (0.1g/L), yeast extract (0.1g/L), and agar (1g/L) along with a vitamin supplement, trace elements, and FeS as a sulfide source.[9] M. bipunctata was cultured on an agar plate for 2-3 days at 28 °C (mesophyte as optimum for cultivation set at around 28 degrees) before several species of Macromonas bipunctata appeared.[1][2] The optimal pH level for growing is around 7.2-7.4 which classifies this species as a neutrophil.[1][2] The colonies that form produce a white film on the surface of the plate along with flat, finegrained colonies of 1-4 mm diameter[9]. M. bipunctata has a cell area at 9 µm x 20 µm .[1][2] This species is also pear-shaped, gram-negative and catalase positive.[9][1]
Genomics
[edit]Many of the studies using M. bipunctata still rely heavily on its morphological characteristics.[4] However, it has been used as a phylogenetic comparison frequently so its 16s rRNA is catalogued: it is 1461 bp.[10] The same study shows that the genome contains 67.6% GC content.[10]
Metabolism
[edit]Macromonas bipunctata has been cultured in many studies that show H2O2 is formed in different biochemical reactions: not only in the process of respiration with the participation of enzymes of the electron transport chain, but also in the course of utilization of intracellular oxalate inclusions in the cytoplasm.[2][3][4] Oxidation of oxalate inclusions by oxalate oxidase leads to H2O2 accumulation.[2][3][11][10] Furthermore, in the end process of becoming a toxic metabolite, it would decompose upon chemical interaction with the reduced sulfur compounds, whose presence is characteristic for the habitat of these bacteria.[2][3][11][10] When grown on the media containing organic acids of the TCA cycle, the unicellular sulfur bacterium M. bipunctata is able to synthesize and store calcium oxalates inside the cell.[2][3][11][10] This process is possible due to the presence of the high oxaloacetate hydrolase activity in M. bipunctata.[3][11]
The oxalate metabolism throughout different cultures was seen through three different enzymes.[2][3][11][10] One of them leads to the formation of glyoxylate, which may then enter bio-synthetic reactions.[1][2][7] The second way implies oxidation of oxalate to CO2 via formate, which may have be significant in energy metabolism.[1][2] The third way is oxidation of oxalate by oxalate oxidase.[2][3][7]
Futhermore, M. bipunctata was found that reduced sulfur compounds such as H2S were not used by the strains as electron donors, rather, their oxidation was due to interaction with H2O2.[1] This was a main product of O2 reduction in respiration.[1][2] It is assumed that Macromonas bipunctata, at least in part, is responsible for the metabolism of organic acids and calcium deposition in the form of a calcite crystals.[2][10] This bacterium recently classified as colorless sulfuric bacterium which has the ability to partially oxidize inorganic sulfur compounds.[2][10]
Ecology
[edit]M. bipunctata is lives in several different environments. Other than its communal living in moonmilk formations in certain caves, it was first isolated from a white mat formed in a waste-water. [1][5] This microorganism is also found as a free-living microbe adapted to high-calcium and high alkaline, freshwater environments.[8][12]
Biogeochemical significance
[edit]Macromonas bipunctata has an indirect connection to the discovery of several antibiotics within the moonmilk formations, but its greatest importance is in its chemical cycling of minerals such as sulfur and calcium in mesophilic environments.[3]This microbe plays a major, holistic role in cycling sulfur through the environment.[13]This bacteria has the ability to precipitate fine crystals of calcite as a byproduct of its activity through calcite inclusions within the cell of the microorganism.[3][14] It also helps make magnesia crystals and the combination of the two provide the majority of the moonmilk formation that provides a mesophilic environment for several Archaea ad Bacterial phyla that live within the formations.[14][3]
References
[edit][1] [2] [7] [11] [6] [5] [3] [4] [10]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Dubininia, Galina A., Fred A. Rainey, and J. GiJs Kuenen (1924). "Genus VII. Macromonas Utermohl and Koppe in Koppe 1924". Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. 2: 721–724.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Eprintsev, A. T., Falaleeva, M. I., Klimova, M. A., & Parfenova, N. V. (2006). "Isolation and properties of malate dehydrogenase from Meso-and thermophilic bacteria". Applied Biochemistry and Microbiology. 3: 241–245.
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- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m LA Riviere, Jan W.M, and Karin Schmidt (2006). "Morphologically Conspicuous Sulfur-Oxidizing Eubacteria". Springer Science. 7: 290–7.
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- ^ a b c d e f Robertson, L. A., Muyzer, G. Kuenen, J. G. (2006). "The colorless sulfur bacteria". The prokaryotes. 2: 985–999.
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- ^ a b c d e f g Reitschuler C, Lins P, Wagner AO, Illmer P (2014). "Cultivation of moonmilk-born non-extremophilic Thaum and Euryarchaeota in mixed culture"". Anaerobe. 29: 73–79.
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- ^ a b c d e f Reinbacher, W. R (1994). "Is it gnome, is it berg, is it mont, is it mond". National Speleological Society. 56: 1–13.
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- ^ a b c d e Grabovich, M.Y., G.A. Dubinina, V.V. Churikova and A.E. Glushkov (1993). "Peculiarities of carbon metabolism in the colorless sulfur bacterium "Macromonas bipunctata"". Mikrobiologiya. 62: 421–428.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b Suzuki, Shino; Kuenen, J. Gijs; Schipper, Kira; van der Velde, Suzanne; Ishii, Shun’ichi; Wu, Angela; Sorokin, Dimitry Y.; Tenney, Aaron; Meng, XianYing (2014-05-21). "Physiological and genomic features of highly alkaliphilic hydrogen-utilizing Betaproteobacteria from a continental serpentinizing site". Nature Communications. 5: 3900. doi:10.1038/ncomms4900. PMC 4050266. PMID 24845058.
- ^ a b c Falkow, Stanley; Rosenberg, Eugene; Schleifer, Karl-Heinz; Stackebrandt, Erko (2006-11-14). The Prokaryotes: Vol. 7: Proteobacteria: Delta and Epsilon Subclasses. Deeply Rooting Bacteria. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9780387254975.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Spring, Stefan, Michael Wagner, Peter Schumann, and Peter Kampfer (2005). ""Malikia Granosa" Gen. Nov., sp. nov., a novel polyhydroxyalkanoate- and polyphoosphate- accumulating bacterium isolated from activated sludge, and reclassification of "Pseudomonas spinosa" as "Malikia spiniosa" comb. nov.". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 55: 621–629.
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- ^ a b c d e f Matsuyama, Michiro (1991). "Enrichment of Macromonas Sp. Densely Populating an Upper Boundary of the H2S Layer of Lake Kaiike". Jpn. J. Limnol.
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- ^ Karavaiko, G. I.; Dubinina, G. A.; Kondrat’eva, T. F. (2006-10-01). "Lithotrophic microorganisms of the oxidative cycles of sulfur and iron". Microbiology. 75 (5): 512–545. doi:10.1134/S002626170605002X. ISSN 0026-2617.
- ^ Hinck, Susanne (2008). "Eco-physiological, chemotactic and taxonomic characterization of hypersaline Beggiatoa originating from microbial mats". Diss. Universität Bremen.
- ^ a b Rodríguez-Martínez, Marta (2011-01-01). Reitner, Joachim; Thiel, Volker (eds.). Mud Mounds. Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series. Springer Netherlands. pp. 667–675. ISBN 9781402092114.