Electron microscopic examination of uncultured soil-dwelling bacteria

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Abstract

Bacteria livingin soil collected froma rice paddy in Fukuoka, Japan, were examined by electron microscopy using a freeze-substitution fixation method. Most of the observed bacteria could be categorized, based on the structure of the cell envelope and overall morphology, into one of five groups: (i) bacterial spore; (ii) Gram-positive type; (iii) Gram-negative type; (iv) Mycobacterium like; and (v) Archaea like. However, a few of the bacteria could not be readily categorized into one of these groups because they had unique cell wall structures, basically resembling those of Gram-negative bacteria, but with the layer corresponding to the peptidoglycan layer in Gram-negative bacteria being extremely thick, like that of the cortex of a bacterial spore. The characteristic morphological features found in many of these uncultured, soil-dwelling cells were the nucleoid being in a condensed state and the cytoplasm being shrunken. We were able to produce similar morphologies in vitro using a Salmonella sp. by culturing under low-temperature, low-nutrient conditions, similar to those found in some natural environments. These unusual morphologies are therefore hypothesized to be characteristic of bacteria in resting or dormant stages. ©2008 The Societies and Blackwell Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.

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Amako, K., Takade, A., Taniai, H., & Yoshida, S. I. (2008). Electron microscopic examination of uncultured soil-dwelling bacteria. Microbiology and Immunology, 52(5), 265–269. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1348-0421.2008.00037.x

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