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1.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 84(19)2018 10 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30030229

ABSTRACT

Most microorganisms living in the environment have yet to be cultured, owing at least in part to their slow and poor propagation properties and susceptibility to oxidative stress. Our previous studies demonstrated that a simple modification in the preparation of agar media, i.e., autoclaving the phosphate and agar separately (termed "PS" medium), can greatly improve the culturability of microorganisms by mitigating oxidative stress compared with the use of "PT" medium (autoclaving the phosphate and agar together). Here, we attempted to isolate phylogenetically novel bacteria by combining PS medium with prolonged cultivation. After inoculation with forest soil or pond sediment samples, significantly more colonies appeared on PS medium than on PT medium. A total of 98 and 74 colonies that emerged after more than 7 days of cultivation were isolated as slow growers from PS and PT media, respectively. Sequencing analysis of their 16S rRNA genes revealed that the slow growers recovered from PS medium included more phylogenetically novel bacteria than those from PT medium, including a strain that could be classified into a novel order in the class Alphaproteobacteria Further physiological analysis of representative strains showed that they were actually slow and poor growers and formed small but visible colonies only on PS medium. This study demonstrates that the culturability of previously uncultured bacteria can be improved by using an isolation strategy that combines a simple modification in medium preparation with an extended incubation time.IMPORTANCE Most microbial species inhabiting natural environments have not yet been isolated. One of the serious issues preventing their isolation is intrinsically slow and/or poor growth. Moreover, these slow and/or poor growers are likely to be highly sensitive to environmental stresses, especially oxidative stress. We reported previously that interaction between agar and phosphate during autoclave sterilization generates hydrogen peroxide, which adversely affects the culturability of environmental microorganisms, in particular, slow-growing organisms vulnerable to oxidative stress. In this study, we successfully isolated many slow-growing bacterial strains with phylogenetic novelty by simply modifying their cultivation on agar plates, i.e., autoclaving the phosphate and agar separately. The current limited repertoire of culture techniques still has room for improvement in the isolation of microorganisms previously considered unculturable.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/growth & development , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Colony Count, Microbial/methods , Culture Media/metabolism , Agar , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Colony Count, Microbial/instrumentation , Culture Media/chemistry , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Phylogeny , Ponds/microbiology , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Soil Microbiology
2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 80(24): 7659-66, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25281372

ABSTRACT

Microbiologists have been using agar growth medium for over 120 years. It revolutionized microbiology in the 1890s when microbiologists were seeking effective methods to isolate microorganisms, which led to the successful cultivation of microorganisms as single clones. But there has been a disparity between total cell counts and cultivable cell counts on plates, often referred to as the "great plate count anomaly," that has long been a phenomenon that still remains unsolved. Here, we report that a common practice microbiologists have employed to prepare agar medium has a hidden pitfall: when phosphate was autoclaved together with agar to prepare solid growth media (PT medium), total colony counts were remarkably lower than those grown on agar plates in which phosphate and agar were separately autoclaved and mixed right before solidification (PS medium). We used a pure culture of Gemmatimonas aurantiaca T-27(T) and three representative sources of environmental samples, soil, sediment, and water, as inocula and compared colony counts between PT and PS agar plates. There were higher numbers of CFU on PS medium than on PT medium using G. aurantiaca or any of the environmental samples. Chemical analysis of PT agar plates suggested that hydrogen peroxide was contributing to growth inhibition. Comparison of 454 pyrosequences of the environmental samples to the isolates revealed that taxa grown on PS medium were more reflective of the original community structure than those grown on PT medium. Moreover, more hitherto-uncultivated microbes grew on PS than on PT medium.


Subject(s)
Agar/chemistry , Bacteria/growth & development , Culture Media/adverse effects , Agar/adverse effects , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Bacteria/metabolism , Culture Media/chemistry , Culture Media/metabolism , Environmental Microbiology , Hot Temperature
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