Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Vol.42, No.5, 769-774, 1995
Growth of an Aerobic Bacterium with Trichloroacetic-Acid as the Sole Source of Energy and Carbon
The aerobic microbial decomposition of trichloroacetic acid (TCA) was studied. A TCA-decomposing culture was enriched in continuous-flow and batch experiments on a medium containing TCA as the only organic component. Pure cultures of TCA degraders were isolated from the enrichment on TCA agar plates. Characterization of several isolates proved them all to be representatives of the same bacterium, a Gram-negative, catalase-positive and cytochrome C-oxidase-positive, non-motile, somewhat irregular rod. The bacterium could not be identified on the basis of its carbon-source-utilization pattern, but a partial sequencing of the 16S rDNA gene showed the isolate to belong to the gamma sub-group of Proteobacteria, and to be phylogenetically close to Acinetobacter calcoaceticus. The isolated bacterium grew exponentially with TCA as the sole source of energy and carbon. The maximum growth rate (mu(max)) and the growth yield on TCA (Y-X/S) were determined to be 0.027h(-1) and 0.027 g biomass/g TCA, respectively. The bacterium was not able to grow on mono- or dichloroacetic acid, but it could grow on acetate.
Keywords:PLASMID DNA;SOIL