Abstract

A novel bacterium, strain b6(T) (T=type strain), was isolated from a disused mine site by growth using arsenite [As(III)] as energy source in a simple mineral medium. Cells of strain b6(T) were rod-shaped, Gram-negative, non-sporulating and motile. Optimum growth occurred at temperatures between 20 and 30 degrees C, and at pH between 4.0 and 7.5. Strain b6(T) grew chemoautotrophically on As(III), sulphur and thiosulphate, and also heterotrophically on yeast extract and a variety of defined organic compounds. Several other Thiomonas strains, including the type species Thiomonas (Tm.) intermedia, were able to oxidize As(III), though only strain b6(T) and strain NO115 could grow using As(III) as sole energy source in the absence of any organic compound. The G+C content of the DNA of strain b6(T) was 65.1 mol %. Comparative small subunit (SSU) ribosomal RNA (rRNA) analysis indicated that strain b6(T) belongs to the genus Thiomonas in the beta-subdivision of the Proteobacteria. It was closely related to an unnamed Thiomonas strain (NO115) isolated from a Norwegian mining site, though sequence identities between strain b6(T) and characterized Thiomonas species were less than 95%. DNA-DNA hybridization between strain b6(T) and the type species of the genus Tm. intermedia showed less than 50% homology. On the basis of phylogenetic and phenotypic characteristics, strain b6(T) (DSM 16361(T), LMG 22795(T)) is proposed as the type strain of the new species Thiomonas arsenivorans, sp. nov.

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