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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Oct 1996, 3620-3631, Vol 62, No. 10
JR Leadbetter and JA Breznak
Two morphologically distinct, H2- and CO2-utilizing methanogens were
isolated from gut homogenates of the subterranean termite,
Reticulitermes-flavipes (Kollar) (Rhinotermitidae). Strain RFM-1 was a
short straight rod (0.4 by 1.2 micron), whereas strain RFM-2 was a slightly
curved rod (0.34 by 1.6 microns) that possessed polar fibers. Their
morphology, gram-positive staining reaction, resistance to cell lysis by
chemical agents, and narrow range of utilizable substracts were typical of
species belonging to the family Methanobacteriaceae. Analysis of the nearly
complete sequences of the small-subunit rRNA- encoding genes confirmed this
affiliation and supported their recognition as new species of
Methanobrevibacter: M. cuticularis (RFM- 1) and M. curvatus (RFM-2). The
per cell rates of methanogenesis by strains RFM-1 and RFM-2 in vitro, taken
together with their in situ population densities (ca. 10(6) cells.gut-1;
equivalent to 10(9) cells . ml of gut fluid-1), could fully account for the
rate of methane emission by the live termites. UV epifluorescence and
electron microscopy confirmed that RFM-1- and RFM-2-type cells were the
dominant methanogens in R.flavipes collected in Michigan (but were not the
only methanogens associated with this species) and that they colonized the
peripheral, microoxic region of the hindgut, i.e., residing on or near the
hindgut epithelium and also attached to filamentous prokaryotes associated
with the gut wall. An examination of their oxygen tolerance revealed that
both strains possessed catalase-like activity. Moreover, when dispersed in
tubes or agar medium under H2-CO2-O2 (75: 18.8:6.2, vol/vol/vol), both
strains grew to form a thin plate about 6 mm below the meniscus, just
beneath the oxic-anoxic interface. Such growth plates were capable of
mediating a net consumption of O2 that otherwise penetrated much deeper
into uninoculated control tubes. Similar results were obtained with an
authentic strain of Methanobrevibacter arboriphilicus. This is the first
detailed description of an important and often cited but poorly understood
component of the termite gut microbiota.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Physiological ecology of Methanobrevibacter cuticularis sp. nov. and Methanobrevibacter curvatus sp. nov., isolated from the hindgut of the termite Reticulitermes flavipes
Department of Microbiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing 48824-1101, USA.
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