Vol. 36, No. 2 INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SYSTEMATIC BACTERIOLOGY, Apr. 1986, p. 314-316 0020-7713/86/020314-03$02.OOIO Copyright 0 1986, International Union of Microbiological Societies Acetivibrio cellulosolvens Is a Synonym for Acetivibrio cellulolyticus: Emendation of the Genus Acetivibrio? WILLIAM D. MURRAY Division of Biological Sciences, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, Canada K I A OR6 Acetivibrio cellulosolvens BAST was compared with Acetivibrio cellulolyticus CD2T and was found to be identical in all morphological and biochemical characteristics. The description of the genus Acetivibrio is emended as originally described by I. M. Robinson and A. E. Ritchie (Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 31:333-338, 1981) to include anaerobic, gram-negative, straight to slightly curved rods that produce mainly acetic acid, ethanol, H2 and C 0 2 and that are motile by means of a single flagellum or multiple flagella. It is proposed that A . cellulosolvens BAST be correctly classified as A . cellulolyticus. Khan et al. (4) reported the isolation of Acetivibrio cellulosolvens BAST, a new species of cellulolytic anaerobe. This microbe was described as a nonmotile straight rod capable of hydrolyzing and growing on esculin and therefore different from Acetivibrio cellulolyticus CD2T (6). The description of the genus Acetivibrio (6, 9) was emended by these authors (4) to include nonmotile strains. However, when strain BAST was grown in this laboratory in the cellulose-basal medium of Patel et al. (7), the cells were found to be straight to slightly curved and showed tumbling motility in hanging-drop preparations. The inconsistency of these observations with the published description (4) prompted a taxonomic comparison of A . cellulosolvens BAST with A . cellulolyticus CD2T. MATERIALS AND METHODS Microorganisms and media. A . cellulosolvens BAST (NRCC 2936) and A . cellulolyticus CD2T (NRCC 2248) were obtained from the National Research Council of Canada Culture Collection. Also compared was a stock strain of A . cellulolyticus which had been maintained in this laboratory for 3 years on cellulose-basal medium. This stock strain will be referred to as strain LS (laboratory strain). The following two types of media were used in this study: a synthetic basal medium and a peptone-yeast extract (PY) broth. The composition of and procedure for preparation of synthetic basal medium were as described by Patel et al. (7). The three Acetivibrio strains were maintained in this medium, which contained approximately 0.5% (wthol) cellulose in the form of small squares of four-ply facial tissue. The PY broth, which was used for biochemical tests, was prepared as described by Holdeman et al. (3). Electron micrographs. For electron microscopy, strains BAST, CD2T and LS were grown for 48 h at 35°C without shaking in cellulose-basal medium. After dilution in distilled water, the cells were placed in Formvar films and dialyzed overnight. The films were placed on carbon-coated grids, shadowed with Pd-Au, and examined with a Siemens electron microscope, model 101. Biochemical tests. The procedures of Holdeman et al. (3) were used for biochemical characterization. In substrate t Issued as National Research Council of Canada paper no. 25336. utilization tests, the desired substrates were added to both PY broth and synthetic basal medium at concentrations of 0.5 to 1.0% (wthol) (3). When a test required the addition of a fermentable substrate (e.g., semisolid motility medium), 0.5% cellobiose was used. The test media were inoculated with 0.05 ml of 72-h-old cultures grown in cellulose-basal medium and were incubated at 35°C. Test results were determined after 72 h and 7 days. Negative tests were held for 4 weeks. Metabolic products, from cellulose-basal medium, were quantified by gas chromatography. Gas volume was measured with a gas manometer, and the gas composition (N2, C02, and H2) was determined by gas chromatography by the method of van Huyssteen (10). Alcohols and volatile acids were assayed by the method of Ackman (1). Lactic acid was determined enzymatically (5). Khan et al. (4) reported the same pH and temperature growth ranges for strain BAST that Patel et al. (7) described for CD2T. The reported DNA base compositions for these two strains were also similar. Accordingly, these determinations were not repeated in the present study. RESULTS Surface colonies of strains BAST, CD2T, and LS on cellulose agar were visible after 7 days and showed identical colony morphology. Colonies were 1 to 2 mm in diameter, round, raised, and cream colored. After 3 weeks, the colonies were slightly larger and had undulate margins. Immediately around and below the colonies were clear zones where the cellulose had been digested. Cells of the three strains grown for 48 h in cellulose-basal medium showed identical morphology (Fig. 1). Single cells were straight to slightly curved rods, 0.4 to 0.6 pm wide by 2 to 6 km long, Cells occurred singly, in pairs, and occasionally in short chains. All three strains stained gram negative. This Gram stain reaction was verified by the dissolution of the cell wall and cytoplasmic membrane with 3% KOH (2). All three strains were motile. Hanging-drop preparations of cells grown for 48 h in cellulose-basal medium without shaking showed tumbling motility. Motility was also indicated in cellobiose-semisolid medium (SIM medium containing 0.5% cellobiose; Difco). However, flagella were not seen in electron micrographs. In PY broth, only cellobiose, cellulose, and salicin supported the growth of all three strains. Growth on these substrates was much heavier in synthetic basal medium, and 3 14 Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 01:22:39 SYNONYM OF A . CELLULOLYTICUS VOL. 36, 1986 315 FIG. 1. Electron micrographs of strains BAST, CD2T, and LS grown for 48 h in cellulose-basal medium. Bar = 1 bm. strains BAST, CD2T, and LS were also able to grow in esculin-basal medium but not in PY broth-esculin medium. Upon addition of ferric ammonium citrate to the three esculin containing culture broths, all gave positive reactions for esculin hydrolysis. Strain BAST was also able to ferment xylose in cellulose-basal medium but not in PY broth, whereas CD2T and LS could not ferment xylose in either medium. However, the ability to ferment xylose was acquired by CD2T and LS after 2 months of successive biweekly subcultures in cellobiose-basal medium. This ability was not acquired by parallel cultures carried in microcrystalline (Avicel) cellulose-basal medium. No growth occurred in either PY broth or synthetic basal medium supplemented with adonitol, amygdalin, arabinose, dulcitol, erythritol, fructose, galactose, glucose, glycerol, glycogen, hippurate, inositol, inulin, lactate, lactose, maltose, mannitol, mannose, melezitose, melibiose, pyruvate, raffinose, ribose, sorbitol, sorbose, starch, sucrose, or trehalose. Tests for acetylmethylcarbinol, indole, ammonia, urease, gelatinase, and catalase production were negative. Sulfate and nitrate were not reduced. When strains BAST, CD2T, and LS were grown in 1% Solka Floc (ball-milled cellulose) at 35°C for 5 days with rotary shaking, they produced the same metabolites: C 0 2 , H2, acetic acid, and ethanol, at approximately the same concentrations. When these cultures were grown without shaking, there was a shift in metabolite production towards greater ethanol production with trace quantities of lactic acid and a concomitant decrease in acetic acid and H2 production (Table 1). DISCUSSION Patel et al. (7) carried out substrate utilization tests in PY broth and found that A . cellulolyticus CD2T could utilize only cellobiose, cellulose, and salicin. In the present study, these were also the only substrates in PY broth utilized by strains CD2T, LS, and BAST. Patel et al. (7) indicated that PY broth was not the ideal growth medium for CD2T. It appeared that PY broth lacked some of the vital nutrients present in synthetic basal medium, because this strain could only be successfully cultivated in cellobiose-PY broth for three successive transfers. The delicate balance between growth and no growth in PY broth was further demonstrated by the ability of A . cellulolyticus CD2T to grow in cellobiosePY broth under either an 80% N2-20% C 0 2 or a 100% N2 headspace but in salicin-PY broth only under an 80% N2-20% C02 headspace (7). It appears, therefore, that the ability of strains BAST, CD2T, and LS to grow in and hydrolyze esculin was caused by the presence of additional required nutrients in esculin-basal medium. The only nutritional difference noted among strains BAST, CD2T, and LS was the ability of BAST to utilize xylose. The ability of strain BAST to utilize xylose was not reported by Khan et al. (4). It was previously noted in this laboratory (unpublished data) that the ability to utilize xylose was acquired by strain CD2T after it had been maintained in cellobiose-basal medium for 2 months. In the present study, both CD2T and LS developed the ability to utilize xylose after repeated transfers in cellobiose-basal medium but not in microcrystalline cellulose-basal medium. The cellobiose may have been contaminated by small amounts of xylose, which may have induced the enzymes necessary for xylose assimilation. Similarly, A . cellulolyticus CD2T enzyme inTABLE 1. Metabolic products of cellulose fermentation" Amt (mmol/liter) of product formed in cellulose fermentation by: Product CO? H? Acetic acid Ethanol Lactic acid Shaken Unshaken BAST CD2T LS BAST CD2T LS 36.0 68.2 18.4 3.0 35.5 67.0 17.6 2.5 36.1 68.4 18.2 3.1 30.7 44.1 12.5 9.7 trb 31.2 43.9 12.2 9.1 tr 31.5 44.6 12.5 9.4 tr Cellulose-basal medium contained 1% Solka Floc (ball-milled cellulose) and was incubated at 35°C for 5 days. Tr, Trace amounts. Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 01:22:39 316 MURRAY INT. duction for glucose fermentation was accomplished by Patel and MacKenzie (8) in 1%(wthol) glucose-basal medium. Patel et al. (7) reported that strain CD2T produced COz, H2, and acetic acid as the major metabolites and trace amounts of ethanol; lactic acid was not detected. Strain BAST was reported to produce C 0 2 , HZ,acetic acid, ethanol, and trace amounts of lactic acid (4). The results from the present study show that all three strains produced the same products and that the level of these metabolites could be shifted in favor of reduced products by stationary incubat ion. Strain CD2T was reported to possess a single flagellum located one-third of the distance from the end of the cell (7). Although flagella were not seen in electron micrographs in the present study, all three strains were found to be motile. Flagella may have been lost during handling. Failure to observe flagella in electron micrographs of strain BAS was used as evidence by Khan et al. (4) to state that BAS was nonmotile. Although visual observations of attached flagella indicate that a microorganism is motile, the absence of flagella does not prove that a microorganism is nonmotile. This investigation has shown that strain BAST is morphologically and biochemically identical to strains CD2= and LS and that A . cellulosolvens is therefore a synonym for A . cellulolyticus. Since strain BAST is motile, the emendation by Khan et al. (4) to include nonmotile strains in the description of the genus Acetivibrio is nullified. It is proposed that A . cellulosolvens BAST be correctly classified as A . cellulolyticus. It is further proposed that the description of the genus Acetivibrio, which contains the two species A . cellulolyticus and A . ethanolgignens (6), be emended as originally stated by Robinson and Ritchie (9) to include anaerobic, gram-negative, straight to slightly curved rods and C 0 2 and that produce mainly acetic acid, ethanol, HZ, that are motile by means of a single flagellum or multiple flagella. J. SYST. BACTERIOL. ACKNOWLEDGMENT I thank G. B. Patel of the National Research Council of Canada for helpful discussion and comments. LITERATURE CITED 1. Ackman, R. G. 1972. Porous polymer bead packings and formic acid vapor in GLC of volatile fatty acids. J. Chromatogr. Sci. 10:56&565. 2. Gregersen, T. 1978. Rapid method for distinction of Gramnegative from Gram-positive bacteria. Europ. J. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 5123-127. 3. Holdeman, L. V., E. P. Cato, and W. E. C. Moore (ed.). 1977. Anaerobe laboratory manual, 4th ed. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg. 4. Khan, A. W., E. Meek, L. C. Sowden, and J. R. Colvin. 1984. Emendation of the genus Acetivibrio and description of Acetivibrio cellulosolvens sp. nov., a nonmotile cellulolytic mesophile. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 34:419-422. 5. Olson, G. F. 1962. Optimal conditions for the enzymatic determination of L-lactic acid. Clin. Chem. 8:l-10. 6. Patel, G. B. 1984. Genus XII. Acetivibrio, p. 658-660. In N . R. Krieg and J. G. Holt (ed.), Bergey’s manual of systematic bacteriology, vol. 1. The Williams & Wilkins Co., Baltimore. 7. Patel, G. B., A. W, Khan, B. J. Agnew, and J. R. Colvin. 1980. Isolation and characterization of an anaerobic, cellulolytic microorganism, Acetivibrio cellulolyticus gen. nov., sp. nov. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 30:179-185. 8. Patel, G. B., and C. R. MacKenzie. 1982. Metabolism of Acetivibrio cellulolyticus during optimized growth on glucose, cellobiose and cellulose. Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 16:2 12-2 18, 9. Robinson, I. M., and A. E. Ritchie. 1981. Emendation of Acetivibrio and description of Acetivibrio erhanolgignens, a new species from the colons of pigs with dysentery. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 31:333-338. 10. van Huyssteen, J. J. 1967. Gas chromatographic separation of anaerobic digester gases using porous polymer. Water Res. 1:237-242. Downloaded from www.microbiologyresearch.org by IP: 88.99.165.207 On: Sat, 17 Jun 2017 01:22:39
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