Abstract
Mesophilic, moderately halophilic bacteria were isolated from a silica-rich geothermal lake, the Blue Lagoon in Iceland. The isolates are strictly aerobic, but reduce nitrate to nitrite, and are oxidase- and catalase-positive. The nonsporeforming and nonmotile Gram negative rods are 0.6–0.8 μm in diameter and variable in length (9–18 μm), and contain gas vacuoles. The GC content in their DNA is 66.15%. The minimum, optimum, and maximum temperatures for growth are 22°C, 45°:C, and 50°C, respectively. The isolates do not grow without added salt in the medium and can grow at up to 7% NaCl (w/v). The optimal salinity for growth is 3.5%–4% NaCl. The pH range for growth is 6.5–8.5, with the optimal pH at 7.0. At optimal conditions the bacterium has a doubling time of 80 min. The main cytochrome is a membrane-bound cytochrome c with an α-peak at 549 nm. Sequencing of 16S rRNA from the type strain ITI-1157 revealed it to be a proteobacterium of the α-subclass with the closest relatives being Roseobacter litoralis and Paracoccus kocurii. The new isolates do not contain bacteriochlorophyll a and are considered to represent a new genus and a new species, Silicibacter lacuscaerulensis.
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Received: September 17, 1996 / Accepted: December 10, 1996
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Petursdottir, S., Kristjansson, J. Silicibacter lacuscaerulensis gen. nov., sp. nov., a mesophilic moderately halophilic bacterium characteristic of the Blue Lagoon geothermal lake in Iceland . Extremophiles 1, 94–99 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/s007920050020
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s007920050020