|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||
Shewanella frigidimarina strain NCIMB 400 is a marine bacterium of the gamma subgroup of proteobacteria. It was isolated from the North Sea, off the coast of Aberdeen (UK), and exhibits a high degree of respiratory flexibility [1,2]. Substrates that can be used as electron acceptors in include nitrate, nitrite, trimethylamine N-oxide, Fe(III) and Mn(IV). The organism is rich in c-type cytochromes, the synthesis of many of which appears to be increased during anaerobic growth with ferric irons present as respiratory electron acceptor [3]. The S. frigidimarina species group has a number of representatives that form a clear clade in a Shewanella phyologenetic tree based on 16s rDNA gene sequences [2,4]. Other strains of this species, which are phsychrotrophic and halotolerant, have been isolated from Antarctic sea-ice and have a 40-43 mol% G+C content [4]. Biochemical studies of S. frigidimarina NCIMB 400 have revealed genes for two distinct soluble fumarate reductases and crystal structures of encoded proteins have been determined [5,6]. This organism has also been a key target for the study of the biochemistry and genetic regulation of Fe(III) respiration [3]. References:
|
||
Comments/Questions |
||