Publication | Open Access
Identification of acetic acid bacteria isolated from Indonesian sources, especially of isolates classified in the genus Gluconobacter.
115
Citations
19
References
1999
Year
BiologyAcetic Acid BacteriaMicrobial SystematicsFood FermentationLactic Acid BacteriaDna RelatednessIndonesian SourcesGenus GluconobacterMicrobial EcologyFood MicrobiologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobiologyMedicineClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial ResistanceDiagnostic MicrobiologyHealth Sciences
Sixty-four strains of acetic acid bacteria were isolated from Indonesian sources such as fruits, flowers, and fermented foods by the enrichment culture at pH 3.5. Forty-five strains were routinely identified as Acetobacter strains because of their oxidation of acetate and lactate to carbon dioxide and water and their Q-9 isoprenolog, corresponding to 70% of all the 64 acetic acid bacteria isolated. Eight isolates were identified as Gluconacetobacter strains because of their oxidation of acetate and lactate and their Q-10 isoprenolog, occupying 13% of all the isolates. The remaining 11 isolates, accommodated in the genus Gluconobacter because of no oxidation of acetate and lactate and because of their Q-10 isoprenolog, accounted for 17% of all the isolates. They were divided into two groups based on DNA base compositions. One comprised the seven isolates, which had high G1C contents of DNA ranging from 60.3 to 63.5 mol% and of which DNAs hybridized with that of the type strain of Gluconobacter oxydans at values of 64-94% of DNA relatedness. The other comprised the remaining four isolates, which had low G+C contents of DNA ranging from 57.5 to 57.7 mol% and of which DNAs hybridized with that of the type strain of Gluconobacter frateurii at values of 63-77% of DNA relatedness. The high values of DNA relatedness, 84 to 96%, were obtained between the type strains of Gluconobacter cerinus and Gluconobacter asaii.
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