Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A Methane-Dependent Coccus, with Notes on Classification and Nomenclature of Obligate, Methane-Utilizing Bacteria

1966; American Society for Microbiology; Volume: 91; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1128/jb.91.5.1924-1931.1966

ISSN

1098-5530

Autores

J. W. Foster, Richard H. Davis,

Tópico(s)

Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects

Resumo

Foster , J. W. (The University of Texas, Austin), and Richard H. Davis . A methane-dependent coccus, with notes on classification and nomenclature of obligate, methane-utilizing bacteria. J. Bacteriol. 91: 1924–1931. 1966.—A new coccus-shaped bacterium capable of aerobic growth at the expense of methane or methanol in a mineral salts medium is described. The organism did not grow at the expense of any of the conventional substrates or homologous hydrocarbons tested. It is gram-negative, nonmotile, and thermotolerant. It grows well at 50 C, optimally at 37 C, but does not grow at 55 C. The cells are encapsulated and have a characteristic diplococcoid arrangement. Washed, “resting-cell” suspensions oxidized certain primary alcohols and short-chain alkanes, an example of “nongrowth oxidation.” Of the methane-C utilized, 86% was “fixed” in organic form; the remainder was oxidized to CO 2 . The guanine-cytosine content of the extracted deoxyribonucleic acid was 62.5%. Obligate methane-utilizing bacteria are considered as “one-carbon” organisms rather than hydrocarbon utilizers. The assimilation pathway in the obligate methane-methanol bacteria is different from that in the facultative methanol utilizers. Nomenclatural problems arising from the use of the prefix “ Methano -” to denote both bacteria that oxidize methane and bacteria that produce methane are discussed. The obligate, one-carbon, methane-methanol bacteria are considered as “methyl” utilizers, and the prefix “ Methylo -” is suggested as a solution to the problem of generic cognomens. “ Methylococcus capsulatus ” gen. n., sp. n. is the name proposed for the new methane coccus.

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