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Journal of Environmental Biology

pISSN: 0254-8704 ; eISSN: 2394-0379 ; CODEN: JEBIDP

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    Abstract - Issue Jan 2023, 44 (1)                                     Back


nstantaneous and historical temperature effects on a-pinene

Isolation of agarose digesting Achromobacter sp. and Brevundimonas diminuta using customized earthworm gut

as an enrichment system

 

J.M. Pawar1*, K.B. Mulye1, J.O. Talker1, E.O. Talker1,2 and A.B. Nikam1,3   

1Department of Biotechnology and Microbiology, VPM's B. N. Bandodkar College of Science, Thane- 400 601, India

2Department of Clinical Genomics and hypoxia, Advanced Centre for Treatment, Research and Education in Cancer (ACTREC),

Tata Memorial Centre, Navi Mumbai- 410 210, India

3Department of Genetics, Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital and Medical Research Institute, Mumbai-400 053, India

*Corresponding Author Email : jmpawar@vpmthane.org                  *ORCiD: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5695-1492

 

Received: 13.12.2021                                                                                           Revised: 09.05.2022                                                                           Accepted: 25.06.2022

 

 

Abstract

Aim: To isolate potential agarose digesting bacteria from gut of Eisenia fetida fed with agar agar as a major feed.

Methodology: E. fetida was fed on agar agar for 17 days in a comprehensive vermicompost unit, and gut-washing was collected. A specially designed dilute nutrient medium containing agarose as a solidifying agent was used to grow and isolate agarose digesting bacteria. Agarose digestion was confirmed by iodine test and novel 'micro-tip’ assay.

Results: A selected CFU comprising two bacterial species showed depressions on the media, indicative of agarose digestion. Subsequently, cloning based 16S rRNA gene identification revealed the two isolates to be Brevundimonas diminuta and Achromobacter sp. with 99% similarity. These two could not be separated as pure cultures, indicating a likely associative interaction.

Interpretation: The present study is the first of its sort to demonstrate a probable associative interaction between Brevundimonas diminuta and Achromobacter sp. in agarose digestion, while using "Customized Earthworm Gut Enrichment System."

Key words: Agarose digesters, Earthworm, Enrichment system, Gut microflora

 

 

 

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