Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 1999, p. 5124-5133, Vol. 65, No. 11
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0

Department of Ecological Microbiology,
Received 4 June 1999/Accepted 27 August 1999
A thermophilic, fermentative microaerophile (ET-5b) and a
thermophilic acetogen (ET-5a) were coisolated from oxic soil obtained from Egypt. The 16S rRNA gene sequence of ET-5a was 99.8% similar to
that of the classic acetogen Moorella thermoacetica.
Further analyses confirmed that ET-5a was a new strain of M. thermoacetica. For ET-5b, the nearest 16S rRNA gene sequence
similarity value to known genera was approximately 88%. ET-5b was
found to be a motile rod with a genomic G+C content of 50.3 mol%.
Cells were weakly gram positive and lacked spores. Growth was optimal
at 55 to 60°C and pH 6.5 to 7.0. ET-5b grew under both oxic and
anoxic conditions, but growth was erratic under atmospheric
concentrations of O2. Utilizable substrates included
oligosaccharides and monosaccharides. Acetate, formate, and succinate
supported growth only under oxic conditions. Saccharides yielded
succinate, lactate, ethanol, acetate, formate, and H2 under
anoxic conditions; fermentation products were also formed under oxic
conditions. A new genus is proposed, the type strain being
Thermicanus aegyptius ET-5b gen. nov., sp. nov. (DSMZ
12793). M. thermoacetica ET-5a (DSMZ 12797) grew
commensally with T. aegyptius ET-5b on oligosaccharides via
the interspecies transfer of H2 formate, and lactate. In
support of this interaction, uptake hydrogenase and formate
dehydrogenase specific activities were fundamentally greater in
M. thermoacetica ET-5a than in T. aegyptius
ET-5b. These results demonstrate that (i) soils subject to high
temperatures harbor uncharacterized thermophilic microaerophiles, (ii)
the classic acetogen M. thermoacetica resides in such
soils, and (iii) trophic links between such soil bacteria might
contribute to their in situ activities.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Ecological Microbiology, BITOEK, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany. Phone: (49) (0)921-555 640 (or [49] [0]921-555
641). Fax: (49) (0)921-555 793. E-mail:
harold.drake{at}bitoek.uni-bayreuth.de.
Present address: Gulf Ecology Division, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Gulf Breeze, FL 32561.
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