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Title: [Resistance of the petroleum-oxidizing microorganism Dietzia sp. to hyperosmotic shock in reconstituted biofilms]. Author: Plakunov VK, Zhurina MV, Beliaev SS. Journal: Mikrobiologiia; 2008; 77(5):581-9. PubMed ID: 19004337. Abstract: A number of halotolerant and halophilic bacterial strains were isolated from the Romashkinskoe oil field (Tatarstan) stratal waters having a salinity of up to 100 g/l. The isolation of pure cultures involved biofilm reconstitution on M9 medium with paraffins. The associations obtained were dispersed and reinoculated onto solid media that contained either peptone and yeast extract (PY) or paraffins. It was shown that such associations included both oil-oxidizing bacteria and accompanying chemoheterotrophic bacteria incapable of oil oxidation. The pure cultures that were isolated were used for creating binary biofilms. In these biofilms, interactions between halophilic and nonhalophilic bacteria under hypo- and hyperosmotic shocks were investigated. We conducted a detailed study of a biofilm obtained from an oil-oxidizing halotolerant species (with an upper growth limit of 10-12% NaCl) identified as Dietzia sp. and an extremely halophilic gram-negative bacterium (growing within the 5-20% NaCl concentration range) of the genus Chromohalobacter that did not oxidize paraffins. If these microorganisms were grown in a mixed suspension (planktonic) culture that was not supplemented with an additional amount of NaCl, no viable cells of the halophilic microorganism were detected after reinoculation. In contrast, only halophilic cells were detected at a NaCl concentration of 15%. Thus, no mutual protective influence of the microorganisms manifested itself in suspension culture, either under hypo- or under hyperosmotic shock. Neither could the halophile cells be detected after reinoculating a biofilm obtained on a peptone medium without addition of NaCl. However, biofilms produced at a NaCl concentration of 15% contained approximately equal numbers of cells of the halophilic and halotolerant organisms. Thus, the halophile in biofilms sustaining a hyperosmotic shock exerts a protective influence on the halotolerant microorganism. Preliminary data suggest that this effect is due to release by the halophile of osmoprotective substances (ectoine and glutamate), which are taken up by the halotolerant species. Such substances are diluted by a large medium volume in suspension cultures, whereas, in biofilms, their diffusion into the medium is apparently hampered by their interaction with the intercellular polymer matrix.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]