April T M, Abbott S P, Foght J M, Currah R S
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada.
Can J Microbiol. 1998 Mar;44(3):270-8. doi: 10.1139/w97-152.
Four unique strains of Pseudallescheria boydii were isolated from oil-soaked soils in British Columbia and Alberta and compared to strains from cattle dung and raw sewage. Considerable variability in morphology, colony appearance, colony diameter, and temperature tolerance occurred among the strains. They also varied in the sporogenous states produced in culture; all strains had a Scedosporium anamorph and either the Graphium anamorph or cleistothecial teleomorph. Conspecificity of the six isolates was inferred from their morphology and supported by restriction fragment length polymorphism profiles of the internally transcribed spacer region of rDNA and comparing these to Petriella sordida, a similar taxon in the Microascaceae. Three of the strains isolated from oil-contaminated soil and the strain from sewage were tested for their ability to utilize hydrocarbons by incubation with Prudhoe Bay Crude oil as the sole carbon source. Gas chromatographic analysis of the residual oil revealed that the strains isolated from oil-contaminated soil degraded the linear aliphatics. The strain from sewage, previously shown by others to utilize the volatile n-alkanes (i.e., ethane, propane, and butane), did not utilize the liquid saturate compounds. None of the strains was observed to degrade compounds in the aromatic fraction. Pseudallescheria boydii may be an important agent for in situ bioremediation of saturates in oil-contaminated sites.
从不列颠哥伦比亚省和艾伯塔省的油浸土壤中分离出四株独特的博伊德假阿利什霉菌株,并与牛粪和原污水中的菌株进行比较。这些菌株在形态、菌落外观、菌落直径和温度耐受性方面存在相当大的差异。它们在培养过程中产生的产孢状态也有所不同;所有菌株都有一个拟青霉无性型,以及炭角菌无性型或闭囊壳有性型。从它们的形态推断这六个分离株的同种性,并通过核糖体DNA内转录间隔区的限制性片段长度多态性图谱得到支持,并将这些图谱与微囊菌科中的类似分类单元污黑皮壳菌进行比较。测试了从油污染土壤中分离出的三株菌株和污水中的菌株以普拉德霍湾原油作为唯一碳源进行培养时利用碳氢化合物的能力。对残留油的气相色谱分析表明,从油污染土壤中分离出的菌株降解了线性脂肪族化合物。之前其他人已表明污水中的菌株能利用挥发性正构烷烃(即乙烷、丙烷和丁烷),但该菌株不能利用液态饱和化合物。未观察到任何菌株降解芳香族部分的化合物。博伊德假阿利什霉可能是油污染场地中饱和烃原位生物修复的重要媒介。