Sodium, an obligate growth requirement for predominant rumen bacteria.

  • 1 March 1974
    • journal article
    • Vol. 27  (3) , 549-52
Abstract
Sodium is an obligate growth requirement for most currently recognized predominant species of rumen bacteria. The isoosmotic deletion of Na(+) from a nutritionally adequate defined medium completely eliminated growth of most species. Growth yields and rates were both a function of Na(+) concentration for Na(+)-requiring species, and Na(+) could not be replaced by Rb(+), Li(+), or Cs(+) when these ions were substituted for Na(+) at a concentration equivalent to an Na(+) concentration that supported abundant growth. Li(+), Cs(+), or Rb(+) was toxic at an Na(+)-replacing concentration (15 mM) but not at a K(+)-replacing concentration (0.65 mM). K(+) was also an obligate growth requirement for rumen bacteria in media containing Na(+) and K(+) as major monovalent cations, but K(+) could be replaced, for most species, by Rb(+). The quantities of Na(+) that support rapid and abundant growth of Na(+)-requiring rumen bacteria show that these organisms are slight halophiles. A growth requirement for Na(+) appears more frequent among nonmarine bacteria than has been previously believed.

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