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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2000, p. 4433-4439, Vol. 66, No. 10
Center for Marine and Environmental Research,
Ru
Received 10 April 2000/Accepted 27 July 2000
The relationships and interactions within a
methanotrophic-heterotrophic groundwater community were studied in a
closed system (shake culture) in the presence of methane as the primary
carbon and energy source and with the addition of the pure linear
alkylbenzenesulfonate (LAS) congener 2-[4-(sulfophenyl)]decan as a
cometabolic substrate. When cultured under different conditions, this
community was shown to be a stable association, consisting of one
obligate type II methanotroph and four or five heterotrophs possessing
different nutritional and physiological characteristics. The results of experiments examining growth kinetics and nutritional relationships suggested that a number of complex interactions existed in the community in which the methanotroph was the only member able to grow on
methane and to cometabolically initiate LAS transformation. These
growth and metabolic activities of the methanotroph ensured the supply
of a carbon source and specific nutrients which sustained the growth of
four or five heterotrophs. In addition to the obligatory nutritional
relationships between the methanotroph and heterotrophs, other possible
interactions resulted in the modification of basic growth parameters of
individual populations and a concerted metabolic attack on the complex
LAS molecule. Most of these relationships conferred beneficial effects
on the interacting populations, making the community adaptable to
various environmental conditions and more efficient in LAS
transformation than any of the individual populations alone.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Possible Interactions within a
Methanotrophic-Heterotrophic Groundwater Community Able To Transform
Linear Alkylbenzenesulfonates
ak* and
er Bo
kovi
Institute, HR-10002 Zagreb, Croatia
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for
Marine and Environmental Research, Ru
er Bo
kovi
Institute, P.O. Box 180, HR-10002 Zagreb, Croatia. Phone: 385-1-46 80 944. Fax: 385-1-46 80 242. E-mail: hrsak{at}rudjer.irb.hr.
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