Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America
Most large-scale crude oil spills occur in marine environments. We screened easily propagable/maintainable halophiles to develop agents for the bioremediation of marine spills. A bacterial strain isolated from a polluted region of the Great Salt Lake was characterized and tested for its ability to d...
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2025-07-01
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| author | Jonathan Oakes Johurimam Noah Kuddus Easton Downs Clark Oakey Kristina Davis Laith Mohammad Kiara Whitely Carl E. Hjelmen Ruhul Kuddus |
| author_facet | Jonathan Oakes Johurimam Noah Kuddus Easton Downs Clark Oakey Kristina Davis Laith Mohammad Kiara Whitely Carl E. Hjelmen Ruhul Kuddus |
| author_sort | Jonathan Oakes |
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| description | Most large-scale crude oil spills occur in marine environments. We screened easily propagable/maintainable halophiles to develop agents for the bioremediation of marine spills. A bacterial strain isolated from a polluted region of the Great Salt Lake was characterized and tested for its ability to degrade crude oil. The strain (<i>Salinivibrio costicola)</i> is motile, catalase- and lipase-positive, a facultative anaerobe, and an obligate halophile. Its growth optimum and tolerance ranges are: NaCl (5%, 1.25–10%), pH (8, 6–10), and temperature (22 °C, 4–45 °C). Its genome (3,166,267 bp) consists of two circular chromosomes and a plasmid, containing 3197 genes, including some genes potentially relevant to hydrocarbon metabolism. The strain forms a biofilm but is considered nonpathogenic and is sensitive to some common antibiotics. Lytic bacteriophages infecting the strain are rare in the water samples we tested. The strain survived on desiccated agar media at room temperature for a year, grew optimally in complex media containing 0.1–1% crude oil, but failed to reduce total recoverable petroleum hydrocarbons from crude oil. Thus, a recalcitrant halophile may endure crude oil without mineralizing. Due to some of their advantageous attributes, such strains can be considered for genetic manipulation to develop improved agents for bioremediation. |
| format | Article |
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| institution | Kabale University |
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| language | English |
| publishDate | 2025-07-01 |
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| series | Microorganisms |
| spelling | doaj-art-4bb300b081484986b769bf9335e5a59a2025-08-20T03:35:28ZengMDPI AGMicroorganisms2076-26072025-07-01137156810.3390/microorganisms13071568Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of AmericaJonathan Oakes0Johurimam Noah Kuddus1Easton Downs2Clark Oakey3Kristina Davis4Laith Mohammad5Kiara Whitely6Carl E. Hjelmen7Ruhul Kuddus8Department of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USADepartment of Biology, Utah Valley University, Orem, UT 84058, USAMost large-scale crude oil spills occur in marine environments. We screened easily propagable/maintainable halophiles to develop agents for the bioremediation of marine spills. A bacterial strain isolated from a polluted region of the Great Salt Lake was characterized and tested for its ability to degrade crude oil. The strain (<i>Salinivibrio costicola)</i> is motile, catalase- and lipase-positive, a facultative anaerobe, and an obligate halophile. Its growth optimum and tolerance ranges are: NaCl (5%, 1.25–10%), pH (8, 6–10), and temperature (22 °C, 4–45 °C). Its genome (3,166,267 bp) consists of two circular chromosomes and a plasmid, containing 3197 genes, including some genes potentially relevant to hydrocarbon metabolism. The strain forms a biofilm but is considered nonpathogenic and is sensitive to some common antibiotics. Lytic bacteriophages infecting the strain are rare in the water samples we tested. The strain survived on desiccated agar media at room temperature for a year, grew optimally in complex media containing 0.1–1% crude oil, but failed to reduce total recoverable petroleum hydrocarbons from crude oil. Thus, a recalcitrant halophile may endure crude oil without mineralizing. Due to some of their advantageous attributes, such strains can be considered for genetic manipulation to develop improved agents for bioremediation.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2607/13/7/1568<i>Salinivibrio costicola</i>obligate halophilebiofilmbioremediation |
| spellingShingle | Jonathan Oakes Johurimam Noah Kuddus Easton Downs Clark Oakey Kristina Davis Laith Mohammad Kiara Whitely Carl E. Hjelmen Ruhul Kuddus Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America Microorganisms <i>Salinivibrio costicola</i> obligate halophile biofilm bioremediation |
| title | Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America |
| title_full | Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America |
| title_fullStr | Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America |
| title_full_unstemmed | Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America |
| title_short | Isolation and Characterization of a Crude Oil-Tolerant Obligate Halophilic Bacterium from the Great Salt Lake of the United States of America |
| title_sort | isolation and characterization of a crude oil tolerant obligate halophilic bacterium from the great salt lake of the united states of america |
| topic | <i>Salinivibrio costicola</i> obligate halophile biofilm bioremediation |
| url | https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2607/13/7/1568 |
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