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1.
J Appl Microbiol ; 113(3): 521-30, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22642383

ABSTRACT

AIMS: To develop a method to detect bacteria from environmental samples that are able to metabolize lignin. METHODS AND RESULTS: A previously developed UV-vis assay method for lignin degradation activity has been developed for use as a spray assay on agar plates. Nine mesophilic strains were isolated using this method from woodland soil incubated in enrichment cultures containing wheat straw lignocellulose: four Microbacterium isolates, two Micrococcus isolates, Rhodococcus erythropolis (all Actinobacteria) and two Ochrobactrum isolates (Alphaproteobacteria). Three thermotolerant isolates were isolated from the same screening method applied at 45°C to samples of composted wheat straw from solid-state fermentation: Thermobifida fusca and two isolates related to uncharacterized species of Rhizobiales and Sphingobacterium (Bacteroidetes), the latter strain showing tenfold higher lignin degradation activity than other isolates. The isolated strains were able to depolymerize samples of size-fractionated high molecular weight and low molecular weight Kraft lignin, and produced low molecular weight metabolites oxalic acid and protocatechuic acid from incubations containing wheat straw lignocellulose. CONCLUSIONS: A new method for the isolation of bacteria able to metabolize lignin has been developed, which has been used to identify 12 bacterial isolates from environmental sources. The majority of isolates cluster into the Actinobacteria and the Alphaproteobacteria. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: Lignin-degrading bacterial strains could be used to convert lignin-containing feedstocks into renewable chemicals and to identify new bacterial lignin-degrading enzymes.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/isolation & purification , Bacteria/metabolism , Lignin/metabolism , Biodegradation, Environmental , Culture Media/metabolism , Hydroxybenzoates/metabolism , Oxalic Acid/metabolism , Soil Microbiology , Triticum
2.
Proc AMIA Symp ; : 498-502, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11825238

ABSTRACT

Automated physiologic event detection and alerting is a challenging task in the ICU. Ideally care providers should be alerted only when events are clinically significant and there is opportunity for corrective action. However, the concepts of clinical significance and opportunity are difficult to define in automated systems, and effectiveness of alerting algorithms is difficult to measure. This paper describes recent efforts on the Simon project to capture information from ICU care providers about patient state and therapy in response to alerts, in order to assess the value of event definitions and progressively refine alerting algorithms. Event definitions for intracranial pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure were studied by implementing a reliable system to automatically deliver alerts to clinical users alphanumeric pagers, and to capture associated documentation about patient state and therapy when the alerts occurred. During a 6-month test period in the trauma ICU at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 530 alerts were detected in 2280 hours of data spanning 14 patients. Clinical users electronically documented 81% of these alerts as they occurred. Retrospectively classifying documentation based on therapeutic actions taken, or reasons why actions were not taken, provided useful information about ways to potentially improve event definitions and enhance system utility.


Subject(s)
Intensive Care Units , Monitoring, Physiologic/methods , Software , Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Hospital Communication Systems , Humans , Monitoring, Physiologic/instrumentation , User-Computer Interface
3.
Extremophiles ; 4(5): 305-13, 2000 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11057916

ABSTRACT

In March 1996, a survey of hydrothermal sites on the island of Montserrat was carried out. Six sites (Galway's Soufrière. Gages Upper and Lower Soufrières, Hot Water Pond, Hot River, and Tar River Soufrière) were mapped and sampled for chemical, ATP, and microbial analyses. The hydrothermal Soufrière sites on the slopes of the active Chances Peak volcano exhibited temperatures up to almost 100 degrees C and were generally either mildly acidic at pH 5-7 or strongly acidic at pH 1.5-3, but with some hot streams and pools of low redox potential at pH 7-8. Hot Water Pond sites, comprising a series of heated pools near the western shoreline of the island. were neutral and saline, consistent with subsurface heating of entrained seawater. Biological activity shown by ATP analyses was greatest in near-neutral pH samples and generally decreased as acidity increased. A variety of heterotrophic and chemolithotrophic thermophilic organisms were isolated or observed in enrichment cultures. Most of the bacteria that were obtained in pure culture were familiar acidophiles and neutrophiles, but novel, iron-oxidizing species of Sulfobacillus were revealed. These species included the first mesophilic iron-oxidizing Sulfobacillus strains to be isolated and a strain with a higher maximum growth temperature (65 degrees C) than the previously described moderately thermophilic Sulfobacillus species.


Subject(s)
Fresh Water/microbiology , Seawater/microbiology , Adenosine Triphosphate/analysis , Bacillus/classification , Bacillus/genetics , Bacillus/isolation & purification , Bacterial Typing Techniques , DNA, Archaeal/analysis , DNA, Bacterial/analysis , DNA, Ribosomal/analysis , Ecology , Fresh Water/chemistry , Geography , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Hot Temperature , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/analysis , Seawater/chemistry , Sulfolobus/classification , Sulfolobus/genetics , Sulfolobus/isolation & purification , West Indies
4.
Extremophiles ; 4(5): 315-20, 2000 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11057917

ABSTRACT

DNA was extracted from water and sediment samples taken from acidic, geothermal pools on the Caribbean island of Montserrat. 16S rRNA genes were amplified by PCR, cloned, sequenced, and examined to indicate some of the organisms that might be significant components of the in situ microbiota. A clone bank representing the lowest temperature pool that was sampled (33 degrees C) was dominated by genes corresponding to two types of acidophiles: Acidiphilium-like mesophilic heterotrophs and thermotolerant Acidithiobacillus caldus. Three clone types with origins in low- and moderate- (48 degrees C) temperature pools corresponded to bacteria that could be involved in metabolism of sulfur compounds: the aerobic A. caldus and putative anaerobic, moderately thermophilic, sulfur-reducing bacteria (from an undescribed genus and from the Desulfurella group). A higher-temperature sample indicated the presence of a Ferroplasma-like organism, distinct from the other strains of these recently recognized acidophilic, iron-oxidizing members of the Euryarchaeota. Acidophilic Archaea from undescribed genera related to Sulfolobus and Acidianus were predicted to dominate the indigenous acidophilic archaeal population at the highest temperatures.


Subject(s)
DNA, Archaeal/analysis , DNA, Bacterial/analysis , DNA, Ribosomal/analysis , Fresh Water/microbiology , Seawater/microbiology , Acetobacteraceae/genetics , Acetobacteraceae/isolation & purification , Bacillus/genetics , Bacillus/isolation & purification , Cloning, Molecular , Ecology , Fresh Water/chemistry , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Hot Temperature , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/analysis , Seawater/chemistry , West Indies
5.
Extremophiles ; 4(2): 71-6, 2000 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10805560

ABSTRACT

Mineral processing in bioreactors has become established in several countries during the past decade with industrial application of iron- and sulfur-oxidizing bacteria to release occluded gold from mineral sulfides. Cobalt extraction in bioreactors has also been commercialized, and development of high-temperature biooxidation of copper sulfides has reached pilot-plant scale. A variety of potentially useful mineral sulfide-oxidizing thermophiles have been recognized, but the most active strains have not been fully characterized.


Subject(s)
Acids/metabolism , Archaea/metabolism , Bioreactors/microbiology , Industrial Microbiology/trends , Minerals/metabolism , Archaea/growth & development , Hot Temperature , Industrial Microbiology/methods , Iron/metabolism , Metals/isolation & purification , Metals/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , Sulfides/metabolism
6.
Arch Microbiol ; 172(6): 349-53, 1999 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10591844

ABSTRACT

Carbon dioxide limitation of Sulfolobus metallicus resulted in increased cellular concentrations of polypeptides that were predicted to be biotin carboxylase and biotin carboxyl-carrier-protein components of a protein complex. These polypeptides were coeluted from a native polyacrylamide gel and were estimated at 19 and 59 kDa after separation by denaturing gel electrophoresis. Their encoding genes were identified, sequenced and shown to code for polypeptides of 18,580 and 58,235 Da with similarities to biotin carboxyl carrier proteins and biotin carboxylases, respectively. The genes overlapped at the second of two stop codons that terminated the carboxylase gene. A third gene occurred on the opposite strand, 293 bp upstream of the biotin carboxylase gene. Its deduced amino acid sequence was similar to those of carboxyl transferase subunits of carboxylase enzymes, in particular to those of the propionyl-CoA carboxylases. It is proposed that the three described genes could encode the key enzyme complex responsible for carbon dioxide fixation during autotrophic growth of the thermoacidophilic archaea.


Subject(s)
Carboxy-Lyases/genetics , Genes, Archaeal , Sulfolobus/enzymology , Sulfolobus/genetics , Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase/chemistry , Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase/genetics , Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase/metabolism , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases/chemistry , Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases/genetics , Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases/metabolism , Carboxy-Lyases/chemistry , Carboxy-Lyases/metabolism , Carrier Proteins/chemistry , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Fatty Acid Synthase, Type II , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Weight , Open Reading Frames , Phylogeny , Sulfolobus/growth & development
7.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9357734

ABSTRACT

Integrating patient data to facilitate review and annotation is a challenging task in the intensive care unit (ICU), partially due to the wide variety of proprietary systems and types of data involved. This paper describes SIMON-Web, a Java-based user interface to integrate data from an existing bedside monitoring system and a clinical information system (CIS). SIMON-Web displays graphical data from physiologic monitors and other bedside devices as well as information from the clinical laboratory and physician order-entry systems, and allows users to annotate the data using a point-and-click or free-text interface. By continuing to add functionality to SIMON-Web's extensible user interface, we hope to continue to augment and eventually replace manual care provider data charting in the ICU. As of March, 1997, SIMON-Web has been implemented on two bedside personal computer workstations in the cardiac care unit (CCU) at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.


Subject(s)
Computer Communication Networks , Intensive Care Units/organization & administration , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Software , Systems Integration , Computer Graphics , Hospital Information Systems , Point-of-Care Systems , User-Computer Interface
8.
FEMS Microbiol Lett ; 134(1): 91-5, 1995 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8593961

ABSTRACT

The production of a 25 kDa protein was greatly increased when a sulfur- and ferrous iron-oxidizing species of Sulfolobus was switched from growth on tetrathionate to growth on ferrous iron. The gene encoding the protein was cloned and sequenced. The predicted amino sequence showed significant similarity to those of the alkyl hydroperoxide reductase/thiol specific anti-oxidant family of proteins that appear to be involved in responses to certain types of oxidative stress.


Subject(s)
Antioxidants , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Genes, Bacterial/genetics , Peroxidases , Sulfolobus/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Bacterial Proteins/biosynthesis , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Base Sequence , Cloning, Molecular , Ferrous Compounds/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Weight , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxidoreductases/genetics , Peroxiredoxins , Sequence Analysis , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Sulfolobus/chemistry , Sulfolobus/metabolism
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