Carmo F L, Santos H F, Peixoto R S, Rosado A S, Araujo F V
Departamento de Microbiologia Geral Instituto de Microbiologia Professor Paulo de Góes Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro Rio de JaneiroRJ Brazil ; Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biotecnologia Vegetal Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro Rio de JaneiroRJ Brazil.
Departamento de Microbiologia Geral Instituto de Microbiologia Professor Paulo de Góes Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro Rio de JaneiroRJ Brazil.
Braz J Microbiol. 2014 May 19;45(1):185-92. doi: 10.1590/s1517-83822014000100024. eCollection 2014.
The Atlantic Rainforest does not have a uniform physiognomy, its relief determines different environmental conditions that define the composition of its flora and fauna. Within this ecosystem, bromeliads that form tanks with their leaves hold water reservoirs throughout the year, maintaining complex food chains, based mainly on autotrophic and heterotrophic bacteria. Some works concluded that the water held by tank bromeliads concentrate the microbial diversity of their ecosystem. To investigate the bacterial diversity and the potential biotechnology of these ecosystems, tank bromeliads of the Neoregelia cruenta species from the Atlantic Rainforest in Brazil were used as models for this research. Bacteria isolated from these models were tested for production of bioactive compounds. DGGE of the water held by tank bromeliads was performed in different seasons, locations and sun exposure to verify whether these environmental factors affect bacterial communities. The DGGE bands profile showed no grouping of bacterial community by the environmental factors tested. Most of the isolates demonstrated promising activities in the tests performed. Collectively, these results suggest that tank bromeliads of the N. cruenta species provide important habitats for a diverse microbial community, suggesting that each tank forms a distinct micro-habitat. These tanks can be considered excellent sources for the search for new enzymes and/or new bioactive composites of microbial origin.
大西洋雨林没有统一的地貌,其地形决定了不同的环境条件,这些条件界定了其动植物群落的组成。在这个生态系统中,凤梨科植物用叶子形成“水箱”,全年储存着水源,维持着主要基于自养和异养细菌的复杂食物链。一些研究得出结论,凤梨科植物“水箱”中储存的水集中了其生态系统的微生物多样性。为了研究这些生态系统的细菌多样性和潜在生物技术,来自巴西大西洋雨林的红刺裸萼球凤梨被用作本研究的模型。对从这些模型中分离出的细菌进行生物活性化合物生产测试。在不同季节、地点和光照条件下,对凤梨科植物“水箱”中的水进行变性梯度凝胶电泳(DGGE),以验证这些环境因素是否影响细菌群落。DGGE条带图谱显示,所测试的环境因素并未使细菌群落分组。在进行的测试中,大多数分离菌株表现出有前景的活性。总体而言,这些结果表明,红刺裸萼球凤梨为多样的微生物群落提供了重要栖息地,这表明每个“水箱”都形成了一个独特的微生境。这些“水箱”可被视为寻找新的微生物源酶和/或新的生物活性复合物的绝佳来源。