Axenic Cultivation of the Anaerobic Free‐Living Ciliate Trimyema compressum

Abstract
The strain N of Trimyema compressum, an anaerobic free-living ciliate, was cultivated axenically in a medium containing a buffered salt solution, yeast extract, trypticase, and glutathione. Dead bacteria were indispensable as food; a culture of the ciliate together with heat-killed Klebsiella pneumoniae has been established for more than one year. In the medium described, the ciliates grow to a higher cell density than in cultures with living bacteria as food. During the process of axenization, a nonmethanogenic bacterial endosymbiont was lost. In the microbodies of T. compressum, hydrogenase could be localized by the technique of indirect immunofluorescence.