Azomonas agilis is a species of motile, Gram-negative bacteria found in water and is capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen. It is the type strain for the genus Azomonas.
Azomonas agilis | |
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Colonial morphology (left) and microscopic morphology (x100; right) | |
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Species: | A. agilis
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Binomial name | |
Azomonas agilis (Beijerinck 1901)
Winogradsky 1938 |
A. agilis resembles protists with its ovoid, ellipsoidal, or coccoid cells.[1] The cells are relatively large, usually 2.5–6.4 μm long and 2.0–2.8 μm wide, though giant cells that are 10.0–13.5 μm have been described.[1] The cells have peritrichous flagella which enable motility.[1] The species also produces a diffusible yellow-green or red-violet pigment which fluoresces bluish-white under ultraviolet light.[1]
A. agilis was first isolated and described by Martinus Beijerinck in 1901, who obtained the species from Dutch canal water in Delft.[1] Beijernick's original strain has been lost, so the strain isolated by Albert Kluyver and van den Bout is now the neotype.[1] Despite the fact that mannitol was used by Beijerinck in his enrichment medium for A. agilis, the bacteria in pure culture cannot use it as a carbon source unless it is first degraded by other microbes.[1]
The species can tolerate salt concentrations up to 1.0% and is resistant to iodoacetate (1 μM) which suggests it may have ability to live in contaminated waters with relatively high concentrations of organic matter and mineral salts.[1] This bacterium has also been implicated in the bioremediation of cadmium-polluted water.[2]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h Martin Dworkin; Stanley Falkow (12 October 2006). The prokaryotes: a handbook on the biology of bacteria. Springer. pp. 769–771. ISBN 978-0-387-25496-8. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
- ^ You KM, Park YK. Cd2 removal by Azomonas agilis PY101, a cadmium accumulating strain in continuous aerobic culture. Biotechnol Lett. 2004 Nov 2;20(12):1157-59.
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