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result(s) for
"Azoarcus"
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Azoarcus taiwanensis sp. nov., a denitrifying species isolated from a hot spring
2014
The strain NSC3
T
, a novel, facultative, chemolithotrophic, denitrifying, alkaliphilic, sulfide-oxidizing bacterium isolated from a hot spring in Yang-Ming Mountain, Taiwan, was Gram negative, rod shaped, and motile by single polar flagella and grew facultatively by adopting a denitrifying metabolism. The 16S rRNA sequence analysis revealed that strain NSC3
T
belongs to beta subclass of the Proteobacteria and most closely related to
Azoarcus evansii
KB740
T
(95.44 %),
Azoarcus toluvorans
Td-21
T
(95.21 %),
Azoarcus tolulyticus
Tol-4
T
(95.08 %), and
Azoarcus toluclasticus
MF63
T
(94.94 %). The phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA gene sequences indicated that the strain NSC3
T
formed a distinct lineage in the Betaproteobacteria and that it exhibited the highest level of sequence similarity with species of the genera
Azoarcus
(95.28–93.13 %). The major fatty acids of the type strain were C
16:0
(26.9 %), C
16:1w7c
(28.9 %), C
18:0
(9.6 %), and C
18:1w7c/w6c
(29.9 %). The DNA G+C content of genomic DNA was 63.7 mol%. On the basis of the 16S rRNA sequence similarity, phenotypic and genotypic characteristics, and chemotaxonomic data, the strain NSC3
T
could be differentiated from other species of the genus
Azoarcus
. Therefore, strain NSC3
T
(equal to BCRC 80111
T
and DSM 24109
T
) is proposed as a novel species in genus
Azoarcus
, for which the name
Azoarcus taiwanensis
sp. nov. is proposed. The strain NSC3
T
is deposited in Bioresource Collection and Research Center, Taiwan, under the reference number BCRC 80111
T
, and German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures, Germany (DSMZ), with DSM 24109
T
.
Journal Article
Description of Azoarcus nasutitermitis sp. nov. and Azoarcus rhizosphaerae sp. nov., two nitrogen-fixing species isolated from termite nest and rhizosphere of Ficus religiosa
by
Chia-Fang, Tsai
,
Hameed Asif
,
Shih-Yao, Lin
in
Cardiolipin
,
Color vision
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
2020
A polyphasic taxonomic approach was used to characterise two presumably novel bacteria, designated strains CC-YHH838T and CC-YHH848T isolated from termite nest and rhizosphere of Ficus religiosa, respectively. These two nitrogen-fixing strains were observed to be Gram-staining-negative, aerobic rod, and colonies were yellowish in color. Growth of strains was observed at 20–37 °C, pH 7–8, and in the presence of 1–2% NaCl. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA genes revealed a distinct taxonomic position attained by strain CC-YHH838T and CC-YHH848T associated with Thauera hydrothermalis (97.1% sequence identity), and formed a separate branch with Azoarcus indigens (95.4%), Aromatoleum aromaticum (96.2%), and lower sequence similarity to other species. The calculation of OrthoANI values pointed out strains CC-YHH838T and CC-YHH848T gave 78.9% and 79.8% compared to Thauera hydrothermalis, respectively. The major fatty acids (> 5%) were C16:0, C17:0 cyclo, C10:0 3-OH, C16:1ω7c/C16:1ω6c and C18:1ω7c/C18:1ω6c. The polar lipid profile comprised phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, diphosphatidylglycerol and unidentified aminophospholipid and phospholipids; the predominant polyamines were putrescine and spermidine. The predominant respiratory system was ubiquinone (Q-8) and the DNA G + C contents were 61.4 ± 0.1 mol% and 60.2 ± 1.3 mol%, respectively. Based on the phylogenetic and polyphasic comparisons, strains CC-YHH838T and CC-YHH848T are proposed to represent two novel species within the genus Azoarcus in the family Rhodocyclaceae, for which the name Azoarcus nasutitermitis sp. nov. (type strain CC-YHH838T = BCRC 81059T = JCM 32001T) and Azoarcus rhizosphaerae sp. nov. (type strain CC-YHH848T = BCRC 81060T = JCM 32002T) were proposed.
Journal Article
Identification and Biosynthesis of a Novel Xanthomonadin-Dialkylresorcinol-Hybrid from Azoarcus sp. BH72: e90922
2014
A novel xanthomonadin-dialkylresorcinol hybrid named arcuflavin was identified in Azoarcus sp. BH72 by a combination of feeding experiments, HPLC-MS and MALDI-MS and gene clusters encoding the biosynthesis of this non-isoprenoid aryl-polyene containing pigment are reported. A chorismate-utilizing enzyme from the XanB2-type producing 3- and 4-hydroxybenzoic acid and an AMP-ligase encoded by these gene clusters were characterized, that might perform the first two steps of the polyene biosynthesis. Furthermore, a detailed analysis of the already known or novel biosynthesis gene clusters involved in the biosynthesis of polyene containing pigments like arcuflavin, flexirubin and xanthomonadin revealed the presence of similar gene clusters in a wide range of bacterial taxa, suggesting that polyene and polyene-dialkylresorcinol pigments are more widespread than previously realized.
Journal Article
Biosynthesis of selenium nanoparticles by Azoarcus sp. CIB
by
Blázquez, María Luisa
,
Díaz, Eduardo
,
Castro, Laura
in
Agricultural practices
,
Anaerobic conditions
,
Analysis
2016
Background
Different bacteria have been reported so far that link selenite resistance to the production of metallic selenium nanoparticles (SeNPs). Although SeNPs have many biotechnological applications in diverse areas, the molecular mechanisms involved in their microbial genesis are not fully understood. The
Azoarcus
genus is a physiologically versatile group of beta-proteobacteria of great environmental relevance.
Azoarcus
sp. CIB is a facultative anaerobe that combines the ability to degrade under aerobic and/or anaerobic conditions a wide range of aromatic compounds, including some toxic hydrocarbons such as toluene and
m
-xylene, with an endophytic life style in the root of rice. We unravel here an additional physiological feature of the strain CIB that is related to its resistance to selenium oxyanions and the formation of SeNPs.
Results
This work is the first report of a member of the
Azoarcus
genus that is able to anaerobically grow in the presence of selenite. Electron microscopy preparations and X-ray spectroscopy analyses demonstrate the reduction of selenite to spherical electron-dense SeNPs whose average size was 123 ± 35 nm of diameter. Our data suggest that the main molecular mechanism of selenite resistance resides on an energy-dependent selenite exporter.
Azoarcus
cells trigger the synthesis of SeNPs when they reach the stationary-phase of growth, and either the exhaustion of electron donor or acceptor, both of which lead to starvation conditions, produce the reduction of selenite to red elemental selenium.
Azoarcus
becomes a promising biocatalyst, either as whole cells or cellular extracts, for the anaerobic and/or aerobic green synthesis of SeNPs.
Conclusions
Azoarcus
turns out to be a new eco-friendly system to reduce selenite and produce spherical SeNPs. Moreover, this is the first report of a rice endophyte able to produce SeNPs. Since
Azoarcus
is also able to degrade both aerobically and anaerobically toxic aromatic compounds of great environmental concern, it becomes a suitable candidate for a more sustainable agricultural practice and for bioremediation strategies.
Journal Article
Azoarcus sp. CIB, an Anaerobic Biodegrader of Aromatic Compounds Shows an Endophytic Lifestyle
by
Fajardo, Susana
,
Fernández-Pascual, Mercedes
,
Prandoni, Nicolás
in
Agricultural practices
,
Agricultural technology
,
Anaerobic conditions
2014
Endophytic bacteria that have plant growth promoting traits are of great interest in green biotechnology. The previous thought that the Azoarcus genus comprises bacteria that fit into one of two major eco-physiological groups, either free-living anaerobic biodegraders of aromatic compounds or obligate endophytes unable to degrade aromatics under anaerobic conditions, is revisited here.
Light, confocal and electron microscopy reveal that Azoarcus sp. CIB, a facultative anaerobe β-proteobacterium able to degrade aromatic hydrocarbons under anoxic conditions, is also able to colonize the intercellular spaces of the rice roots. In addition, the strain CIB displays plant growth promoting traits such nitrogen fixation, uptake of insoluble phosphorus and production of indoleacetic acid. Therefore, this work demonstrates by the first time that a free-living bacterium able to degrade aromatic compounds under aerobic and anoxic conditions can share also an endophytic lifestyle. The phylogenetic analyses based on the 16S rDNA and nifH genes confirmed that obligate endophytes of the Azoarcus genus and facultative endophytes, such as Azoarcus sp. CIB, locate into different evolutionary branches.
This is the first report of a bacterium, Azoarcus sp. CIB, able to degrade anaerobically a significant number of aromatic compounds, some of them of great environmental concern, and to colonize the rice as a facultative endophyte. Thus, Azoarcus sp. CIB becomes a suitable candidate for a more sustainable agricultural practice and phytoremediation technology.
Journal Article
Spontaneous network formation among cooperative RNA replicators
by
Manapat, Michael L.
,
Hayden, Eric J.
,
Lehman, Niles
in
631/181/735
,
631/45/500
,
Analytical, structural and metabolic biochemistry
2012
The origins of life on Earth required the establishment of self-replicating chemical systems capable of maintaining and evolving biological information. In an RNA world, single self-replicating RNAs would have faced the extreme challenge of possessing a mutation rate low enough both to sustain their own information and to compete successfully against molecular parasites with limited evolvability. Thus theoretical analyses suggest that networks of interacting molecules were more likely to develop and sustain life-like behaviour. Here we show that mixtures of RNA fragments that self-assemble into self-replicating ribozymes spontaneously form cooperative catalytic cycles and networks. We find that a specific three-membered network has highly cooperative growth dynamics. When such cooperative networks are competed directly against selfish autocatalytic cycles, the former grow faster, indicating an intrinsic ability of RNA populations to evolve greater complexity through cooperation. We can observe the evolvability of networks through
in vitro
selection. Our experiments highlight the advantages of cooperative behaviour even at the molecular stages of nascent life.
In models of early life it has been suggested that life and evolution would be more easily achieved if RNA molecules could interact, rather than function independently; here an
in vitro
system is designed with several RNA fragments that can assemble into a ribozyme, showing that cooperative networks formed by these fragments outcompete self-catalytic RNA fragments.
Cooperativity in an RNA world
In models of early life characterized by an RNA-only world, it has been suggested that life and evolution would be more easily achieved if the RNA molecules could interact, rather than function independently. They can. Niles Lehman and colleagues demonstrate the validity of the concept
in vitro
using a model system containing RNA fragments that can assemble into a ribozyme. The authors show that the cooperative networks formed by these fragments can outcompete self-catalytic RNA fragments. This work indicates that RNA populations have an intrinsic ability to evolve greater complexity through cooperation, and suggests that the benefits of such behaviour were established early in the development of life on Earth.
Journal Article
Thauera and Azoarcus as functionally important genera in a denitrifying quinoline-removal bioreactor as revealed by microbial community structure comparison
2006
Abstract
Structural shifts associated with functional dynamics in a bacterial community may provide clues for identifying the most valuable members in an ecosystem. A laboratory-scale denitrifying reactor was adapted from use of nonefficient seeding sludge and was utilized to degrade quinoline and remove the chemical oxygen demand. Stable removal efficiencies were achieved after an adaptation period of six weeks. Both denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis profiling of the 16S rRNA gene V3 region and comparison of the 16S rRNA gene sequence clone libraries (LIBSHUFF analysis) demonstrated that microbial communities in the denitrifying reactor and seeding sludge were significantly distinct. The percentage of the clones affiliated with the genera Thauera and Azoarcus was 74% in the denitrifying reactor and 4% in the seeding sludge. Real-time quantitative PCR also indicated that species of the genera Thauera and Azoarcus increased in abundance by about one order of magnitude during the period of adaptation. The greater abundance of Thauera and Azoarcus in association with higher efficiency after adaptation suggested that these phylotypes might play an important role for quinoline and chemical oxygen demand removal under denitrifying conditions.
Journal Article
Functional consortium for denitrifying sulfide removal process
by
Wang, Aijie
,
Ren, Nanqi
,
Chen, Chuan
in
Azoarcus
,
Azoarcus - classification
,
Azoarcus - genetics
2010
Denitrifying sulfide removal (DSR) process simultaneously converts sulfide, nitrate, and chemical oxygen demand from industrial wastewaters to elemental sulfur, nitrogen gas, and carbon dioxide, respectively. This investigation utilizes a dilution-to-extinction approach at 10⁻² to 10⁻⁶ dilutions to elucidate the correlation between the composition of the microbial community and the DSR performance. In the original suspension and in 10⁻² dilution, the strains Stenotrophomonas sp., Thauera sp., and Azoarcus sp. are the heterotrophic denitrifiers and the strains Paracoccus sp. and Pseudomonas sp. are the sulfide-oxidizing denitrifers. The 10⁻⁴ dilution is identified as the functional consortium for the present DSR system, which comprises two functional strains, Stenotrophomonas sp. strain Paracoccus sp. At 10⁻⁶ dilution, all DSR performance was lost. The functions of the constituent cells in the DSR granules were discussed based on data obtained using the dilution-to-extinction approach.
Journal Article
Complete genome of the mutualistic, N2-fixing grass endophyte Azoarcus sp. strain BH72
2006
Azoarcus
sp. strain BH72, a mutualistic endophyte of rice and other grasses, is of agrobiotechnological interest because it supplies biologically fixed nitrogen to its host and colonizes plants in remarkably high numbers without eliciting disease symptoms. The complete genome sequence is 4,376,040-bp long and contains 3,992 predicted protein-coding sequences. Genome comparison with the
Azoarcus
-related soil bacterium strain EbN1 revealed a surprisingly low degree of synteny. Coding sequences involved in the synthesis of surface components potentially important for plant-microbe interactions were more closely related to those of plant-associated bacteria. Strain BH72 appears to be 'disarmed' compared to plant pathogens, having only a few enzymes that degrade plant cell walls; it lacks type III and IV secretion systems, related toxins and an N-acyl homoserine lactones–based communication system. The genome contains remarkably few mobile elements, indicating a low rate of recent gene transfer that is presumably due to adaptation to a stable, low-stress microenvironment.
Journal Article
Cryptic genetic variation promotes rapid evolutionary adaptation in an RNA enzyme
by
Wagner, Andreas
,
Ferrada, Evandro
,
Hayden, Eric J.
in
631/181/2474
,
631/208/457/649
,
631/337/1910
2011
Be prepared, with cryptic mutations
Some mutations, known as cryptic mutations, have no observable effect on an organism's phenotype unless combined with other mutations or environmental changes. As the originally cryptic variation can turn out to be beneficial in such new conditions, it has been proposed that it may facilitate evolutionary adaptation — or 'evolvability', but this has not been rigorously demonstrated experimentally because of the complexity of both natural genomes and environments. In a study of a simplified system
in vitro
— the catalytic activity of a single RNA enzyme — Andreas Wagner and colleagues demonstrate that a population that has accumulated more cryptic variation adapts more rapidly to a new chemical environment than a competing population with fewer variations. The existence of such a pre-adaptation mechanism would have fundamental implications for animal and plant breeding, as well as for complex trait diseases in humans.
Cryptic variation is caused by the robustness of phenotypes to mutations
1
. Cryptic variation has no effect on phenotypes in a given genetic or environmental background, but it can have effects after mutations or environmental change
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
. Because evolutionary adaptation by natural selection requires phenotypic variation, phenotypically revealed cryptic genetic variation may facilitate evolutionary adaptation
6
,
7
,
8
. This is possible if the cryptic variation happens to be pre-adapted, or “exapted”
9
, to a new environment, and is thus advantageous once revealed. However, this facilitating role for cryptic variation has not been proven, partly because most pertinent work focuses on complex phenotypes of whole organisms whose genetic basis is incompletely understood. Here we show that populations of RNA enzymes with accumulated cryptic variation adapt more rapidly to a new substrate than a population without cryptic variation. A detailed analysis of our evolving RNA populations in genotype space shows that cryptic variation allows a population to explore new genotypes that become adaptive only in a new environment. Our observations show that cryptic variation contains new genotypes pre-adapted to a changed environment. Our results highlight the positive role that robustness and epistasis can have in adaptive evolution
10
,
11
.
Journal Article