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International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, Vol 50, 1611-1619, Copyright © 2000 by Society for General Microbiology


Denitrovibrio acetiphilus, a novel genus and species of dissimilatory nitrate-reducing bacterium isolated from an oil reservoir model column

S Myhr and T Torsvik
Department of Microbiology, University of Bergen, Jahnebakken 5, PO Box 7800, N-5020 Bergen, Norway

A novel dissimilatory, nitrate-reducing bacterium, designated strain N2460(T), was isolated from an oil reservoir model column. Strain N2460(T) is a mesophilic, obligately anaerobic, marine, Gram-negative bacterium. The cells are vibrio-shaped and motile by a bipolar flagellum. Strain N2460(T) reduces nitrate to ammonia in a mineral medium supplied by acetate. The presence of a 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase activity indicates that acetate is oxidized via the citric acid cycle. No growth is obtained on formate, higher fatty acids, malate, fumarate, benzoate, alcohols, sugar, yeast extract, crude oil, alkanes, proline, hydrogen, sulfur or thiosulfate with nitrate as electron acceptor. Oxygen, sulfate, thiosulfate and sulfur are not utilized as alternative electron acceptors. Strain N2460(T) grows fermentatively on fumarate, but not on pyruvate. The G+C content of the DNA is 42.6 mol%. 16S rRNA gene analysis shows that strain N2460(T) belongs to the Bacteria and that the closest relative is 'Geovibrio ferrireducens' (sequence similarity 86.9%). On the basis of phylogenetic as well as phenotypic data, it is proposed that strain N2460(T) represents the type strain of a new genus and species, Denitrovibrio acetiphilus gen. nov., sp. nov.


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