A moderately halophilic, mesophilic, Gram-negative, motile, nonsporulating bacterium, designated strain IMPC, was isolated from a table-olive fermentation rich in aromatic compounds, after enrichment on p-coumaric acid under halophilic conditions. Strain IMPC was able to degrade p-coumaric acid. p-hydroxybenzaldehyde and p-hydroxybenzoic acid were detected as breakdown products from p-coumaric acid. Protocatechuic acid was identified as the final aromatic product of p-coumaric acid catabolism before ring fission. Strain IMPC transformed various cinnamic acids with substituent H, OH, CH3 or OCH3 in the para- and/or meta-position of the aromatic ring to the corresponding benzoic acids, indicating a specific selection. A β-oxidation pathway was proposed for these transformations. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rRNA gene revealed that this isolate was a member of the genus Halomonas. Strain IMPC was closely related to Halomonas elongata ATCC 33173Tand Halomonas eurihalina ATCC 49336T. © 2005 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Abdelkafi, S., Labat, M., Casalot, L., Chamkha, M., & Sayadi, S. (2006). Isolation and characterization of Halomonas sp. strain IMPC, a p-coumaric acid-metabolizing bacterium that decarboxylates other cinnamic acids under hypersaline conditions. FEMS Microbiology Letters, 255(1), 108–114. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6968.2005.00061.x
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