Abstract

A facultative methylotrophic bacterium, strain Lp-1, which was isolated from root nodules of lupine (Lupinus polyphyllus L.) on the medium with methanol as a carbon and energy source, exhibited high similarity of the 16S rRNA gene sequences to Delftia strains (94‒99.9%). The cells of Delftia sp. Lp-1 were motile gram-negative rods dividing by binary fission. Predominant fatty acids were C16:0 (34.2%), C16:1ω9 (14.5%), and C18:1ω7c (17.3%). Phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine, and phosphatidylglycerol were the dominant phospholipids. Q8 was the major ubiquinone. Optimal growth occurred at 24‒26°C and pH 7.1‒7.3; growth was inhibited by 1% NaCl. The organism oxidized methanol with the classical methanol dehydrogenase and used the ribulose bisphosphate pathway of C1 metabolism. Analysis of translated amino acid sequence of the large subunit of the MxaF methanol dehydrogenase revealed 85.5‒94% similarity to the sequences of such autotrophic methylotrophs of the class Alphaproteobacteria as Angulomicrobium, Starkeya, and Ancylobacter, indicating the possible acquisition of the mxaF gene via horizontal gene transfer. Delftia sp. Lp-1 (VKM B-3039, DSM 24446), the first methylotrophic member of the genus Delftia, was shown to be a plant symbiont, stimulating plant growth and morphogenesis, increasing the level of photosynthetic pigments and specific leaf weight. It possesses the nifH gene of nitrogen fixation, is capable of phosphate solubilization, synthesis of auxins and siderophores, and is antagonistic to plant pathogenic fungi and bacilli.

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