4.4 Article

Paenibacillus cineris sp nov and Paenibacillus cookii sp nov., from Antarctic volcanic soils and a gelatin-processing plant

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SOC GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1099/ijs.0.02967-0

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Seven strains of aerobic, endospore-forming bacteria were found in soil taken from an active fumarole on Lucifer Hill, Candlemas Island, South Sandwich archipelago, Antarctica, and four strains were from soil of an inactive fumarole at the foot of the hill. Amplified rDNA restriction analysis, 16S rDNA sequence comparisons, SDS-PAGE and routine phenotypic tests support the proposal of two novel species of Paenibacillus, Paenibacillus cineris sp. nov. and Paenibacillus cookii sp. nov., the type strains of which are LMG 18439(T) (= CIP 108109(T)) and LMG 18419(T) (= CIP 108110(T)), respectively. A further strain, isolated from a gelatin-production process, showed more than 99% 16S rDNA sequence similarity to the proposed P. cookii type strain and, although the gelatin isolate was atypical when compared with the fumarole isolates by repeated element primed-l SDS-PAGE and phenotypic analyses, it was shown by DNA-DNA reassociation studies to belong to the same species. Strains of P. cookii produce spreading growth with motile microcolonies. Both species produce swollen sporangia that are typical for the genus, they both show 97.6% 16S rDNA sequence similarity to Paenibacillus azoreducens, they have 51.5-51.6 mol% G + C in their DNA and their major fatty acid is anteiso-C-15:0; however, fatty acids C-16:0 and anteiso-C-17:0 represent, respectively, 18 and 10% of the total in P. cineris, but 11 and 20% in P. cookii.

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