4.4 Article

Arthrobacter flavus sp, nov., a psychrophilic bacterium isolated from a pond in McMurdo Dry Valley, Antarctica

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SOC GENERAL MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1099/00207713-50-4-1553

Keywords

Arthrobacter; psychrophile; Antarctica; halotolerant; yellow pigment

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CMS 19Y(T), a psychrophilic bacterium, was isolated from a cyanobacterial mat sample from a pond in Antarctica and was characterized taxonomically. The bacterium was aerobic, Gram-positive, non-spore-forming, non-motiIe, exhibited a rod-coccus growth cycle and produced a yellow pigment that was insoluble in water but soluble in methanol. No growth factors were required and it was able to grow between 5 and 30 degrees C, between pH 6 and pH 9 and tolerated up to 11.5% NaCl. The cell wall peptidoglycan was Lys-Thr-Ala3 (the A3 alpha variant) and the major menaquinone was MK-9(H-2). The C+C content of the DNA war 64+/-2 mol%. The 165 rDNA analysis indicated that CMS 19Y(T) is closely related to group I Arthrobacter species and showed highest sequence similarity (97.91 %) with Arthrobacter agilis. Furthermore, DNA-DNA hybridization studies also indicated 77% homology between CMS 19Y(T) and A. agilis. It differed from A. agilis, however, in that it was psychrophilic, nonmotile, yellow in colour, exhibited a rod-coccus growth cycle, had a higher degree of tolerance to NaCl and was oxidase- and urease-negative and lipase-positive. In addition, it had a distinct fatty acid composition compared to that of A. agilis: the predominant fatty acids were C-15:(0), anteiso-C-15:0, C-16:0, iso-C-16:0, C-17:(0), anteiso-C-17:0, and C-18:0. It is proposed, therefore, that CMS 19Y(T) should be placed in the genus Arthrobacter as a new species, i.e. Arthrobacter flavus sp. nov. The type strain of A. flavus is CMS 19Y(T)(= MTCC 3476(T)).

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