Affiliation:
1. Baruch Institute for Marine Biology and Coastal Research, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina 29208
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In order to exploit the ability of anaerobic bacteria to degrade certain contaminants for bioremediation of polluted subsurface environments, we need to understand the mechanisms by which such bacteria partition between aqueous and solid phases, as well as the environmental conditions that influence partitioning. We studied four strictly anaerobic bacteria,
Desulfomonile tiedjei
,
Syntrophomonas wolfei
,
Syntrophobacter wolinii
, and
Desulfovibrio
sp. strain G11, which theoretically together can constitute a tetrachloroethylene- and trichloroethylene-dechlorinating consortium. Adhesion of these organisms was evaluated by microscopic determination of the numbers of cells that attached to glass coverslips exposed to cell suspensions under anaerobic conditions. We studied the effects of the growth phase of the organisms on adhesion, as well as the influence of electrostatic and hydrophobic properties of the substratum. Results indicate that
S. wolfei
adheres in considerably higher numbers to glass surfaces than the other three organisms. Starvation greatly decreases adhesion of
S. wolfei
and
Desulfovibrio
sp. strain G11 but seems to have less of an effect on the adhesion of the other bacteria. The presence of Fe
3+
on the substratum, which would be electropositive, significantly increased the adhesion of
S. wolfei
, whereas the presence of silicon hydrophobic groups decreased the numbers of attached cells of all species. Measurements of transport of cells through hydrophobic-interaction and electrostatic-interaction columns indicated that all four species had negatively charged cell surfaces and that
D. tiedjei
and
Desulfovibrio
sp. strain G11 possessed some hydrophobic cell surface properties. These findings are an early step toward understanding the dynamic attachment of anaerobic bacteria in anoxic environments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
38 articles.
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