Affiliation:
1. Department of Environmental Sciences, Cà Foscari University, 30122 Venice,1
2. Center for Marine and Environmental Research, Ruder Bos̆kovićInstitute, 10 000 Zagreb, Croatia2
3. Department of Environmental Biology, University of Siena, I-53100 Siena,3 and
4. Department of Animal Biology and Genetics “Leo Pardi,” University of Firenze, I-50125, Florence,4 Italy, and
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The adhesion of a recently described species,
Acinetobacter venetianus
VE-C3 (F. Di Cello, M. Pepi, F. Baldi, and R. Fani, Res. Microbiol. 148:237–249, 1997), to diesel fuel (a mixture of C
12
to C
28
n
-alkanes) and
n
-hexadecane was studied and compared to that of
Acinetobacter
sp. strain RAG-1, which is known to excrete the emulsifying lipopolysaccharide, emulsan. Oxygen consumption rates, biomass, cell hydrophobicity, electrophoretic mobility, and zeta potential were measured for the two strains. The dropping-mercury electrode (DME) was used as an in situ adhesion sensor. In seawater, RAG-1 was hydrophobic, with an electrophoretic mobility (μ) of −0.38 × 10
−8
m
2
V
−1
s
−1
and zeta potential (ζ) of −4.9 mV, while VE-C3 was hydrophilic, with μ of −0.81 × 10
−8
m
2
V
−1
s
−1
and ζ of −10.5 mV. The microbial adhesion to hydrocarbon (MATH) test showed that RAG-1 was always hydrophobic whereas the hydrophilic VE-C3 strain became hydrophobic only after exposure to
n
-alkanes. Adhesion of VE-C3 cells to diesel fuel was partly due to the production of capsular polysaccharides (CPS), which were stained with the lectin concanavalin A (ConA) conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate and observed in situ by confocal microscopy. The emulsan from RAG-1, which was negative to ConA, was stained with Nile Red fluorochrome instead. Confocal microscope observations at different times showed that VE-C3 underwent two types of adhesion: (i) cell-to-cell interactions, preceding the cell adhesion to the
n
-alkane, and (ii) incorporation of nanodroplets of
n
-alkane into the hydrophilic CPS to form a more hydrophobic polysaccharide–
n
-alkane matrix surrounding the cell wall. The incorporation of
n
-alkanes as nanodroplets into the CPS of VE-C3 cells might ensure the partitioning of the bulk apolar phase between the aqueous medium and the outer cell membrane and thus sustain a continuous growth rate over a prolonged period.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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