Abstract

A stable bacterial association isolated from a sulfur block sample of the Astrakhan gas processing complex was able to utilize n-alkanes as the sole carbon and energy source at low pH. Hydrocarbon-dependent growth occurred at pH 1.6–5.5 (optimum at pH 2.5) and 20–50°C (optimum at 30–35°C). Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene fragments isolated from the total DNA of the enrichment by PCR-DGGE revealed the nucleotide sequences most closely related to extreme acidophilic chemolithotrophs Acidithiobacillus thiooxidans and Sulfobacillus sp. (98–99% similarity) and the sequences exhibiting high similarity to those of slowly growing actinobacteria Mycobacterium europaeum and M. parascrofulaceum (98%). Capacity of any of these organisms for hydrocarbon oxidation has not been reported previously. The taxonomic position of the 16S rRNA gene fragments from the enrichment culture suggests that this bacterial association is a unique microbial community, in which development of acidophilic hydrocarbon-oxidizing bacteria is mediated by a localized pH decrease in the sulfur blocks resulting from elemental sulfur oxidation due to massive development of chemolithotrophic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria.

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