Abstract

A new Desulfovibrio strain ThAc01 was isolated from freshwater mud; the strain conserved energy for growth under strictly anaerobic conditions by disproportionation of thiosulfate or sulfite to sulfate and sulfide according to the following reactions: $$\begin{gathered} S_2 O_3^{2 - } + H_2 O \to SO_4^{2 - } + HS^ - + H^ + \hfill \\ 4SO_3^{2 - } + H^ + {\text{ }} \to 3SO_4^{2 - } + HS^ - \hfill \\ \end{gathered}$$ Strain ThAc01 required acetate as a carbon source, but was unable to utilize acetate as an oxidizable energy source. In a defined medium with acetate and bicarbonate as carbon sources, the growth yields per mol of substrate disproportionated were 2.1 g or 3.2 g dry cell mass on thiosulfate or sulfite, respectively. Strain ThAc01 was also able to grow by dissimilatory sulfate reduction with lactate, ethanol, propanol, or butanol as electron donors and carbon sources which were incompletely oxidized to the corresponding fatty acids. However, growth by sulfate reduction was slower than by disproportionation. Elemental sulfur, nitrate, fumarate, or malate did not serve as electron acceptors. Strain ThAc01 contained desulfoviridin and cytochromes; it required panthothenate and biotin as growth factors and had a DNA base ratio of 64.1 mol% G+C. Disproportionating bacteria similar to strain ThAc01 were enriched with either thiosulfate or sulfite from various freshwater, brackish or marine mud samples. Most probable number enumeration indicated that 2×106 thiosulfate-disproportionating bacteria were present per ml freshwater mud. Of various other sulfate-reducing bacteria tested, only Desulfobacter curvatus (strain AcRM3) was able to disproportionate thiosulfate or sulfite. Desulfovibrio vulgaris (strain Marburg) slowly disproportionated sulfite, but effected only a slight increase in cell density. Strain ThAc01 is proposed as the type strain of a new species, Desulfovibrio sulfodismutans.

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