Affiliation:
1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Analysis of assembled random shotgun sequence data from a low-diversity, subsurface acid mine drainage (AMD) biofilm revealed a single
nif
operon. This was found on a genome fragment belonging to a member of
Leptospirillum
group III, a lineage in the
Nitrospirae
phylum with no cultivated representatives. Based on the prediction that this organism is solely responsible for nitrogen fixation in the community, we pursued a selective isolation strategy to obtain the organism in pure culture. An AMD biofilm sample naturally abundant in
Leptospirillum
group III cells was homogenized, filtered, and serially diluted into a nitrogen-free liquid medium. The resulting culture in the terminal dilution grew autotrophically to a maximum cell density of ∼10
6
cells/ml, oxidizing ferrous iron as the sole energy source. 16S rRNA-internal transcribed spacer region clone library analysis confirmed that the isolate is a member of
Leptospirillum
group III and that the culture is axenic. We propose the name
Leptospirillum ferrodiazotrophum
sp. nov. for this iron-oxidizing, free-living diazotroph. This study highlights how environmental sequence data can provide insights for culturing previously uncultured microorganisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
210 articles.
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