Abstract

The procaryotic endogenous storage polymer known as poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate is actually a mixed polymer of short-chain beta-hydroxy fatty acids. A method for the quantitative recovery of this mixed polymer, called poly-beta-hydroxyalkanoate (PHA), with analysis by capillary gas-liquid chromatography, showed the presence of at least 11 short-chain beta-hydroxy acids in polymers extracted from marine sediments. Polymers extracted from Bacillus megaterium monocultures were also a complex mixture of beta-hydroxy acids with chain lengths between four and eight carbons. Lyophilized sediments were extracted in a modified Soxhlet extractor, and the polymer was purified with ethanol and diethyl ether washes. The purified polymer was treated with ethanol-chloroform-hydrochloric acid (8.5:2.5:1) for 4 h at 100 degrees C, a treatment which resulted in the formation of the ethyl esters of the constituent beta-hydroxy acids. Subsequent assay of the products by gas-liquid chromatography indicated excellent reproducibility and sensitivity (detection limit, 100 fmol). Disturbing sediments mechanically or adding natural chelators increased all major PHA components relative to the bacterial biomass. Gardening of sedimentary microbes by Clymenella sp., an annelid worm, induced decreases in PHA, with changes in the relative proportion of component beta-hydroxy acids. The concentration of PHA relative to the bacterial biomass can reflect the recent metabolic status of the microbiota.

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