Immunomagnetically captured thermophilic sulfate-reducing bacteria from North Sea oil field waters

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Abstract

Immunomagnetic beads (IMB) were used to recover thermophilic sulfate- reducing bacteria from oil field waters from oil production platforms in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea. IMB coated with polyclonal antibodies against whole-cell antigens of the thermophilic Thermodesulfobacterium mobile captured strains GFA1, GFA2, and GFA3. GFA1 was serologically and morphologically identical to T. mobile. GFA2 and GFA3 were spore forming and similar to the Desulfotomaculum strains T90A and T93B previously isolated from North Sea oil field waters by a classical enrichment procedure. Western blots (immunoblots) of whole cells showed that GFA2, GFA3, T90A, and T93B are different serotypes of the same Desulfotomaculum species. Monoclonal antibodies (MAb) against T. mobile type strain cells were produced and used as capture agents on IMB. These MAb, named A4F4, were immunoglobulin M; they were specific to T. mobile and directed against lipopolysaccharides. The prevailing cells immunocaptured with MAb A4F4 were morphologically and serologically similar to T. mobile type strain cells. T. mobile was not detected in these oil field waters by classical enrichment procedures. Furthermore, extraction with antibody-coated IMB allowed pure strains to be isolated directly from primary enrichment cultures without prior time- consuming subculturing and consecutive transfers to selective media.

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APA

Christensen, B., Torsvik, T., & Lien, T. (1992). Immunomagnetically captured thermophilic sulfate-reducing bacteria from North Sea oil field waters. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 58(4), 1244–1248. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.58.4.1244-1248.1992

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