4.5 Article

The potential use of bacterium strain R219 for controlling of the bloom-forming cyanobacteria in freshwater lake

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 465-472

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11274-009-0192-2

Keywords

Pseudomonas aeruginosa R219; Microcystis aeruginosa; Algicidal activity

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China [2008CB418004]
  2. Special Program for Taihu Lake of Jiangsu Natural Science Foundation [BK2007739]

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Cyanobacterial blooms become a serious environmental threat to the freshwater ecosystem, and several physical and chemical methods have been developed for controlling the blooms. In order to develop a biocontrol agent for controlling the blooms, we isolated a bacterial strain R219 that exhibited strong algicidal activity against the dominant bloom-forming species of Microcystis aeruginosa from Lake Tai in China. Based on 16S rDNA sequence analysis we determined the strain R219 to be Pseudomonas aeruginosa by the virtue of its sharing about 99.8% similarity with reference strains in the DNA databases. Biochemical and morphological tests were used to support the accurate identification as that of the bacterium P. aeruginosa. We also tested culture filtrate and ethyl acetate extract of strain R219 and showed both of them exhibited strong algicidal effect on the growth of M. aeruginosa at mid-exponential phase when the R219 filtrate and ethyl acetate extract were applied at various cell densities. Moreover, the P. aeruginosa filtrate showed high potency in removal of the mixed species bloom-forming cyanobacteria collected directly from the Lake Tai. When adding the filtrate of the strain R219 to the mixed-species cyanobacteria, the content of chlorophyll-a of the algae were reduced by as much as 80-90%. Oral acute toxicity assessment for strain R219 demonstrated that all the mice that received the broth or filtrate in doses of 0.5 or 2.0 g kg(-1) were alive without any immediate behavioral changes within 14 days of administration of either broth or filtrate. These results indicate that the strain R219 may have potential for a use in controlling the bloom-forming cyanobacteria in freshwater ecosystems.

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