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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1991 June; 57(6): 1663-1668

Role of sodium in the growth of a ruminal selenomonad.

H J Strobel and J B Russell

Department of Animal Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853.

ABSTRACT

The ruminal selenomonad strain H18 grew rapidly (mu = 0.50 h-1) in a defined medium containing glucose, ammonia, purified amino acids, and sodium (95 mM); little if any ammonia was utilized as a nitrogen source. When the sodium salts were replaced by potassium salts (0.13 mM sodium), there was a small reduction in growth rate (mu = 0.34 h-1), and under these conditions greater than 95% of the cell nitrogen was derived from ammonia. No growth was observed when the medium lacked sodium (less than 0.35 mM) and amino acids were the only nitrogen source. At least six amino acid transport systems (aspartate, glutamine, lysine, phenylalanine, serine, and valine) were sodium dependent, and these systems could be driven by an electrical potential (delta psi) or a chemical gradient of sodium. H18 utilized lactate as an energy source for growth, but only when sodium and aspartate were added to the medium. Malate or fumarate was able to replace aspartate, and when these acids were added, sodium was no longer required. Glucose-grown cells accumulated large amounts of polysaccharide (64% of dry weight), and when the exogenous glucose was depleted, this material was converted to acetate and propionate as long as sodium was present. When the cells were incubated in buffers lacking sodium, succinate accumulated and exogenous succinate could not be decarboxylated. Because sodium had little effect on the transmembrane pH gradient at pH 6.7 to 4.5, it did not appear that sodium was required for intracellular pH regulation.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1991 June; 57(6): 1663-1668







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