Volume 188, Number 1, 97-102, DOI: 10.1007/s00203-007-0231-z

Isolation of magnetotactic bacterium WM-1 from freshwater sediment and phylogenetic characterization

Li Wenbing, Yu Longjiang, Zhou Pengpeng and Zhu Min

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Abstract

The magnetotactic bacterium was isolated from freshwater sediment from North Lake of Wuhan. The isolate, designated WM-1, was Gram-negative, helical shaped, and studied by means of electron microscopy. The strain WM-1 was 0.2-0.4 μm in diameter and 3–4 μm in length. The DNA G + C content was found to be 65.7 mol%. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rDNA gene (Accession number DQ899734 in GeneBank) revealed that this isolate was a member ofαsubdivision of the Proteobacteria. Strain WM-1 was closely related (97.7%) to Magnetospirillum sp. AMB-1. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis showed that these two strains were in fact different strains. Electron diffraction patterns of WM-1 magnetosomes indicated that the magnetosomes were composed of magnetite. The magnetosomes from WM-1 were cuboidal in shape as observed by electron microscopy. Statistical analysis of magnetite crystals from WM-1 showed narrow asymmetric size distribution. The average number of magnetosomes in each WM-1 bacterium was 8 ± 3.4. The average length of magnetosomes in WM-1 was 54 ± 12.3 nm and the average width is 43 ± 10.9 nm. These data showed that the grains in WM-1 were single-domain crystals.

Keywords  Magnetotactic bacteria - 16S rDNA - RAPD - Magnetosome - Electron microscopy

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