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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of microbiology 139 (1984), S. 281-288 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Marine bacteria ; Deep sea ; Barotolerance ; Barophilism ; Pressure adaptation ; Psychrophilism
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Isolations of pressure-adapted deep sea bacteria from depths of 1,400 to 5,100 m resulted in a variety of psychrophilic barotolerant and barophilic strains. Growth rates determined at different pressures indicated a gradual transition between the two types of pressure-adapted isolates. The presence of barotolerant bacteria in deep water, sustained by sinking particulate matter, causes the nonbarophilic response of natural populations, i.e., increased growth after decompression. With increasing pressure-adaptation in barophilic isolates the maximum growth rates at optimum pressures decrease. Thus, the observed general slow-down of microbial activity in the deep sea takes effect regardless of the common occurrence of psychrophilic and barophilic bacteria. The highest degree of barophilism was observed in isolates from nutrient-rich habitats such as intestinal tracts of deep sea animals or decaying carcasses. Detailed studies with an isolate, growing barophilically on a complex as well as a single-carbon-source medium, showed that (1) culturing at pressures lower than optimal for growth resulted in the formation of cell filaments, (2) growth was unaffected by repeated compression/decompression cycles and (3) no perceptible differences in the distribution of radiolabeled carbon from an amino acid mixture occurred in cells grown at, below and above the pressure optimal for growth.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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