Abstract

Vitreoscilla, a gliding bacterium in the Beggiatoaceae, is an obligate aerobe in which cytochrome o functions as the terminal oxidase. Protoheme IX is the only heme type present in this organism. The yield and heme content of Vitreoscilla cells grown in yeast extract, peptone, and acetate were dependent on growth conditions. Cells harvested in early stationary phase contained roughly three times as much heme as cells in early log phase. There was an optimal shaking rate for maximum heme content of cells harvested in stationary phase at fixed initial nutrient concentration. The heme content of cells grown at a fixed shaking rate increased from 5 nmol/g (wet weight) in media which had low nutrient concentration to a maximum of 45 nmol/g (wet weight) in media which had high nutrient concentration, and there was a corresponding sixfold increase in cytochrome o content and an eightfold increase in respiratory rate, evidence that some of the additional heme was incorporated into respiratory pigments. Heme content may be controlled jointly by competition for oxygen and availability of nutrients. Temperature and initial pH affected the growth rate but not the final yield or heme content. Growth rate was optimal at pH 8.0 to 8.5. A defined medium for Vitreoscilla, which is based on glutamate as the carbon source, is described; the other organic components of this medium are acetate, tryptophan, thiamine, biotin, and riboflavin.

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