INVESTIGADORES
RUBERTO Lucas Adolfo Mauro
artículos
Título:
Bacterial hydrocarbon-degrading consortium from Antarctic soils
Autor/es:
RUBERTO LAM; VAZQUEZ SC; MAC CORMACK WP
Revista:
REVISTA ARGENTINA DE MICROBIOLOGíA
Editorial:
ASOCIACION ARGENTINA MICROBIOLOGIA
Referencias:
Lugar: Buenos Aires; Año: 2009 p. 262 - 262
ISSN:
0325-7541
Resumen:
Removal of contaminants from polluted environments could be increased taken advantage of the catabolic capacity of some microorganisms in a process called bioremediation. Nowadays, the use of microbial associations (also called microbial consortia) is gaining attention, because they seem to have a wider degradation spectrum than those exhibited by isolated strains. M10 is a bacterial consortium obtained from hydrocarbon-contaminated Antarctic soils. The members of M10 consortium have been isolated and identified, being the main components bacteria belonging to the Pseudomonas, Sthenotrophomonas and Sphingobacterium genera (1). The use of M10 consortium as a bioaugmentation tool proved to enhance phenanthrene removal from Antarctic soils (2). Transmission electronic microscopy (TEM) images of M10 revealed the presence of morphological diversity among the cells grown in liquid culture with phenanthrene as sole carbon and energy source (Figures A and B). This morphological diversity is in agreement with the idea of M10 as a complex microbial association. Images from Figures C and D are compatible with the presence of an extracellular matrix around the cells. This matrix, that seems to be forcing or helping bacterial cells to stay close together (Figure 3), is associated to the surface of only some members of the consortium (Figure 4).