Breakdown of dimethyl sulphide by mixed cultures and by Thiobacillus thioparus

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Abstract

Dimethyl sulphide (DMS) was degraded by acclimatized activated sludge and by a mixed culture of Thiobacillus thioparus TK-1 and Pseudomonas sp. AK-2. While both these organisms persisted in stable co-culture on DMS, it was found that T. thioparus TK-1 and the derived strain TK-m grew in pure culture on DMS, and oxidized DMS with an apparent Km of 4.5 × 10-5 M. During growth, all the DMS-sulphur was oxidized stoichiometrically to sulphate but no methanol was detected in pure cultures of TK-m. DMS-carbon was probably converted to CO2, since the fixation of 14CO2 was progressively diluted during growth of a culture on 14CO2 and DMS. Growth yields were consistent with autotrophic growth, dependent on the oxidation of the methyl residues to CO2 (probably with formaldehyde as a first intermediate) and the sulphide to sulphate. The organism thus appears to exhibit a mixture, from the one substrate, of chemolithotrophic and methylotrophic energy generation supporting autotrophic growth with CO2 fixation. © 1986.

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Kanagawa, T., & Kelly, D. P. (1986). Breakdown of dimethyl sulphide by mixed cultures and by Thiobacillus thioparus. FEMS Microbiology Letters, 34(1), 13–19. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6968.1986.tb01340.x

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