Alcanivorax which prevails in oil‐contaminated seawater exhibits broad substrate specificity for alkane degradation
- 21 July 2003
- journal article
- website
- Published by Wiley in Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 5 (9) , 746-753
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1468-2920.2003.00468.x
Abstract
Summary: Alcanivorax is an alkane‐degrading marine bacterium which propagates and becomes predominant in crude‐oil‐containing seawater when nitrogen and phosphorus nutrients are supplemented. In order to understand why Alcanivorax overcomes other bacteria under such cultural conditions, competition experiments between Alcanivorax indigenous to seawater and the exogenous alkane‐degrading marine bacterium, Acinetobacter venetianus strain T4, were conducted. When oil‐containing seawater supplemented with nitrogen and phosphorus nutrients was inoculated with A. venetianus strain T4, this bacterium was the dominant population at the early stage of culture. However, its density began to decrease after day 6, and Alcanivorax predominated in the culture after day 20. The crude‐oil‐degrading profiles of both bacteria were therefore investigated. Alcanivorax borkumensis strain ST‐T1 isolated from the Sea of Japan exhibited higher ability to degrade branched alkanes (pristane and phytane) than A. venetianus strain T4. It seems that this higher ability of Alcanivorax to degrade branched alkanes allowed this bacterium to predominate in oil‐containing seawater. It is known that some marine zooplanktons produce pristane and Alcanivorax may play a major role in the biodegradation of pristane in seawater.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maximum growth rates and possible life strategies of different bacterioplankton groups in relation to phosphorus availability in a freshwater reservoirEnvironmental Microbiology, 2006
- Biodegradation of n -Alkylcycloalkanes and n -Alkylbenzenes via New Pathways in Alcanivorax sp. Strain MBIC 4326Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2001
- Use of Wastewater Sludge for the Amendment of Crude Oil Bioremediation in Meso-Scale Beach Simulating TanksEnvironmental Technology, 1999
- Alcanivorax borkumensis gen. nov., sp. nov., a new, hydrocarbon-degrading and surfactant-producing marine bacteriumInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1998
- Construction of bacterial consortia that degrade Arabian light crude oilJournal of Fermentation and Bioengineering, 1996
- Fractionation of a Light Crude Oil and Identification and Quantitation of Aliphatic, Aromatic, and Biomarker Compounds by GC-FID and GC-MS, Part IIJournal of Chromatographic Science, 1994
- 17.alpha.(H)-21.beta.(H)-hopane as a conserved internal marker for estimating the biodegradation of crude oilEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1994
- Basic local alignment search toolJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- A procedure for the isolation of deoxyribonucleic acid from micro-organismsJournal of Molecular Biology, 1961
- Hydrocarbons in petroleumJournal of Chemical Education, 1960