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Dive into the research topics where Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya.


Nature | 2010

Formate-driven growth coupled with H2 production

Yun Jae Kim; Hyun Sook Lee; Eun Sook Kim; Seung Seob Bae; Jae Kyu Lim; Rie Matsumi; Alexander V. Lebedinsky; Tatyana G. Sokolova; Darya A. Kozhevnikova; Sun Shin Cha; Sang-Jin Kim; Kae Kyoung Kwon; Tadayuki Imanaka; Haruyuki Atomi; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; Jung-Hyun Lee; Sung Gyun Kang

Although a common reaction in anaerobic environments, the conversion of formate and water to bicarbonate and H2 (with a change in Gibbs free energy of ΔG° = +1.3 kJ mol−1) has not been considered energetic enough to support growth of microorganisms. Recently, experimental evidence for growth on formate was reported for syntrophic communities of Moorella sp. strain AMP and a hydrogen-consuming Methanothermobacter species and of Desulfovibrio sp. strain G11 and Methanobrevibacter arboriphilus strain AZ. The basis of the sustainable growth of the formate-users is explained by H2 consumption by the methanogens, which lowers the H2 partial pressure, thus making the pathway exergonic. However, it has not been shown that a single strain can grow on formate by catalysing its conversion to bicarbonate and H2. Here we report that several hyperthermophilic archaea belonging to the Thermococcus genus are capable of formate-oxidizing, H2-producing growth. The actual ΔG values for the formate metabolism are calculated to range between −8 and −20 kJ mol−1 under the physiological conditions where Thermococcus onnurineus strain NA1 are grown. Furthermore, we detected ATP synthesis in the presence of formate as a sole energy source. Gene expression profiling and disruption identified the gene cluster encoding formate hydrogen lyase, cation/proton antiporter and formate transporter, which were responsible for the growth of T. onnurineus NA1 on formate. This work shows formate-driven growth by a single microorganism with protons as the electron acceptor, and reports the biochemical basis of this ability.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Radioisotopic, Culture-Based, and Oligonucleotide Microchip Analyses of Thermophilic Microbial Communities in a Continental High-Temperature Petroleum Reservoir

Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; Margarita L. Miroshnichenko; Alexander V. Lebedinsky; Nikolai A. Chernyh; T. N. Nazina; Valery S. Ivoilov; S. S. Belyaev; Eugenia S. Boulygina; Yury P. Lysov; Alexander N. Perov; Andrei D. Mirzabekov; Hans Hippe; Erko Stackebrandt; L'Haridon S; Christian Jeanthon

ABSTRACT Activity measurements by radioisotopic methods and cultural and molecular approaches were used in parallel to investigate the microbial biodiversity and its physiological potential in formation waters of the Samotlor high-temperature oil reservoir (Western Siberia, Russia). Sulfate reduction with rates not exceeding 20 nmol of H2S liter−1 day−1 occurred at 60 and 80°C. In upper horizons (AB, A, and B), methanogenesis (lithotrophic and/or acetoclastic) was detected only in wells in which sulfate reduction did not occur. In some of the wells from deeper (J) horizons, high-temperature sulfate reduction and methanogenesis occurred simultaneously, the rate of lithotrophic methanogenesis exceeding 80 nmol of CH4 liter−1 day−1. Enrichment cultures indicated the presence of diverse physiological groups representing aerobic and anaerobic thermophiles and hyperthermophiles; fermentative organotrophs were predominant. Phylogenetic analyses of 15 isolates identified representatives of the genera Thermotoga, Thermoanaerobacter, Geobacillus, Petrotoga, Thermosipho, and Thermococcus, the latter four being represented by new species. Except for Thermosipho, the isolates were members of genera recovered earlier from similar habitats. DNA obtained from three samples was hybridized with a set of oligonucleotide probes targeting selected microbial groups encompassing key genera of thermophilic bacteria and archaea. Oligonucleotide microchip analyses confirmed the cultural data but also revealed the presence of several groups of microorganisms that escaped cultivation, among them representatives of the Aquificales/Desulfurobacterium-Thermovibrio cluster and of the genera Desulfurococcus and Thermus, up to now unknown in this habitat. The unexpected presence of these organisms suggests that their distribution may be much wider than suspected.


Current Microbiology | 1999

Dissimilatory reduction of Fe(III) by thermophilic bacteria and archaea in deep subsurface petroleum reservoirs of western siberia

A. I. Slobodkin; Christian Jeanthon; L'Haridon S; T. N. Nazina; Margarita L. Miroshnichenko; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

Abstract. Twenty-five samples of stratal fluids obtained from a high-temperature (60–84°C) deep subsurface (1700–2500 m) petroleum reservoir of Western Siberia were investigated for the presence of dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms. Of the samples, 44% and 76% were positive for Fe(III) reduction with peptone and H2 respectively as electron donors. In most of these samples, the numbers of culturable thermophilic H2-utilizing iron reducers were in the order of 10–100 cells/ml. Nine strains of thermophilic anaerobic bacteria and archaea isolated from petroleum reservoirs were tested for their ability to reduce Fe(III). Eight strains belonging to the genera Thermoanaerobacter, Thermotoga, and Thermococcus were found capable of dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction, with peptone or H2 as electron donor and amorphous Fe(III) oxide as electron acceptor. These results demonstrated that Fe(III) reduction may be a common feature shared by a wide range of anaerobic thermophiles and hyperthermophiles in deep subsurface petroleum reservoirs.


Extremophiles | 2004

The first evidence of anaerobic CO oxidation coupled with H2 production by a hyperthermophilic archaeon isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent

Tatyana G. Sokolova; Christian Jeanthon; N. A. Kostrikina; Nikolai A. Chernyh; Alexander V. Lebedinsky; Erko Stackebrandt; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

From 24 samples of hydrothermal venting structures collected at the East Pacific Rise (13°N), 13 enrichments of coccoid cells were obtained which grew on CO, producing H2 and CO2 at 80°C. A hyperthermophilic archaeon capable of lithotrophic growth on CO coupled with equimolar production of H2 was isolated. Based on its 16S rRNA sequence analysis, this organism was affiliated with the genus Thermococcus. Other strains of Thermococcales species (Pyrococcus furiosus, Thermococcus peptonophilus, T. profundus, T. chitonophagus, T. stetteri, T. gorgonarius, T. litoralis, and T. pacificus) were shown to be unable to grow on CO. Searches in sequence databases failed to reveal deposited sequences of genes related to CO metabolism in Thermococcales. Our work provides the first evidence of anaerobic CO oxidation coupled with H2 production performed by an archaeon as well as the first documented case of lithotrophic growth of a Thermococcales representative.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 1999

Thermoanaerobacter siderophilus sp. nov., a novel dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing, anaerobic, thermophilic bacterium

A. I. Slobodkin; T. P. Tourova; B. B. Kuznetsov; N. A. Kostrikina; N. A. Chernyh; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

A thermophilic, anaerobic, spore-forming, dissimilatory Fe(III)-reducing bacterium, designated strain SR4T, was isolated from sediment of newly formed hydrothermal vents in the area of the eruption of Karymsky volcano on the Kamchatka peninsula. Cells of strain SR4T were straight-to-curved, peritrichous rods, 0.4-0.6 micron in diameter and 3.5-9.0 microns in length, and exhibited a slight tumbling motility. Strain SR4T formed round, refractile, heat-resistant endospores in terminally swollen sporangia. The temperature range for growth was 39-78 degrees C, with an optimum at 69-71 degrees C. The pH range for growth was 4.8-8.2, with an optimum at 6.3-6.5. Strain SR4T grew anaerobically with peptone as carbon source. Amorphous iron(III) oxide present in the medium stimulated the growth of strain SR4T; cell numbers increased with the concomitant accumulation of Fe(II). In the presence of Fe(III), strain SR4T grew on H2/CO2 and utilized molecular hydrogen. Strain SR4T reduced 9,10-anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonic acid, sulfite, thiosulfate, elemental sulfur and MnO2. Strain SR4T did not reduce nitrate or sulfate and was not capable of growth with O2. The fermentation products from glucose were ethanol, lactate, H2 and CO2. The G + C content of DNA was 32 mol%. 16S rDNA sequence analysis placed the organism in the genus Thermoanaerobacter. On the basis of physiological properties and phylogenetic analysis, it is proposed that strain SR4T (= DSM 12299T) should be assigned to a new species, Thermoanaerobacter siderophilus sp. nov.


Archives of Microbiology | 1990

Desulfurella acetivorans gen. nov. and sp. nov. —a new thermophilic sulfur-reducing eubacterium

Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; T. G. Sokolova; N. A. Kostrikina; G. A. Zavarzin

A new type of thermophilic cyanobacterial mat, rich in elemental sulfur and containing large numbers of sulfur-reducing bacteria able to utilize different growth substrates at 55° C, was found in the Uzon caldere (Kamchatka). One of the largest groups among these organisms were acetate-oxidizing sulfur-reducing bacteria, numbering 106 cells · cm−3 of mat. The pure culture of a sulfur-reducing eubacterium growing on acetate was isolated. Cells of the new isolate are Gram-negative short rods, often in pairs, motile, with a single polar flagellum. The optimal temperature for growth is 52 to 57° C, with no growth observed at 42 or 73° C. The pH optimum is 6.8 to 7.0. The new isolate is demonstrated to be a true dissimilatory sulfur reducer: it is an obligate anaerobe, it is unable to ferment organic substrates and it can use no electron acceptors other than elemental sulfur. Acetate is the only energy and carbon source, and H2S and CO2 are growth products. No cytochromes were detected. The G+C content of DNA is rather low, only 31.4 mol%. Thus, morphological and physiological features of the new isolate are quite close to those of Desulfuromonas. But on the grounds of a significant difference in the G+C content of DNA, the absence of cytochromes and because of its thermophilic nature, a new genus Desulfurella is proposed with the type species Desulfurella acetivorans.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2002

Nautilia lithotrophica gen. nov., sp. nov., a thermophilic sulfur-reducing epsilon-proteobacterium isolated from a deep-sea hydrothermal vent.

Margarita L. Miroshnichenko; N. A. Kostrikina; L'Haridon S; Christian Jeanthon; Hans Hippe; Erko Stackebrandt; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

A novel, strictly anaerobic, thermophilic sulfur-reducing bacterium, strain 525T, was isolated from tubes of the deep-sea hydrothermal vent polychaete Alvinella pompejana, collected on the East Pacific Rise (13 degrees N). This organism grew in the temperature range 37-68 degrees C, the optimum being 53 degrees C, and in the pH range 6.4-7.4, the optimum being 6.8-7.0. The NaCl range for growth was 0.8-5.0%, the optimum being 3.0%. Strain 525T grew lithoautotrophically with H2 as energy source, S0 as electron acceptor and CO2 as carbon source. Alternatively, strain 525T was able to use formate as an energy source. The G+C content of the genomic DNA was 34.7 mol%. Phylogenetic analysis of the 16S rDNA gene sequence placed strain 525T in the epsilon-subclass of the Proteobacteria, where it forms a deep cluster with recently isolated relatives. On the basis of phenotypic and phylogenetic differences between strain 525T and its closest phylogenetic relatives, it is proposed that the new isolate should be described as a member of a new genus, Nautilia, for which the name Nautilia lithotrophica gen. nov., sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is strain 525T (= DSM 13520T).


Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Characterization of Melioribacter roseus gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel facultatively anaerobic thermophilic cellulolytic bacterium from the class Ignavibacteria, and a proposal of a novel bacterial phylum Ignavibacteriae

Olga A. Podosokorskaya; Vitaly V. Kadnikov; Sergey Gavrilov; Andrey V. Mardanov; Alexander Y. Merkel; Olga V. Karnachuk; N. V. Ravin; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; Ilya V. Kublanov

A novel moderately thermophilic, facultatively anaerobic chemoorganotrophic bacterium strain P3M-2(T) was isolated from a microbial mat developing on the wooden surface of a chute under the flow of hot water (46°C) coming out of a 2775-m-deep oil exploration well (Tomsk region, Russia). Strain P3M-2(T) is a moderate thermophile and facultative anaerobe growing on mono-, di- or polysaccharides by aerobic respiration, fermentation or by reducing diverse electron acceptors [nitrite, Fe(III), As(V)]. Its closest cultivated relative (90.8% rRNA gene sequence identity) is Ignavibacterium album, the only chemoorganotrophic member of the phylum Chlorobi. New genus and species Melioribacter roseus are proposed for isolate P3M-2(T) . Together with I. album, the new organism represents the class Ignavibacteria assigned to the phylum Chlorobi. The revealed group includes a variety of uncultured environmental clones, the 16S rRNA gene sequences of some of which have been previously attributed to the candidate division ZB1. Phylogenetic analysis of M. roseus and I. album based on their 23S rRNA and RecA sequences confirmed that these two organisms could represent an even deeper, phylum-level lineage. Hence, we propose a new phylum Ignavibacteriae within the Bacteroidetes-Chlorobi group with a sole class Ignavibacteria, two families Ignavibacteriaceae and Melioribacteraceae and two species I. album and M. roseus. This proposal correlates with chemotaxonomic data and phenotypic differences of both organisms from other cultured representatives of Chlorobi. The most essential differences, supported by the analyses of complete genomes of both organisms, are motility, facultatively anaerobic and obligately organotrophic mode of life, the absence of chlorosomes and the apparent inability to grow phototrophically.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2002

Carboxydocella thermautotrophica gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel anaerobic, CO-utilizing thermophile from a Kamchatkan hot spring.

Tatyana G. Sokolova; N. A. Kostrikina; N. A. Chernyh; T. P. Tourova; T. V. Kolganova; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

A novel anaerobic, thermophilic, CO-utilizing bacterium, strain 41(T), was isolated from a terrestrial hot vent on the Kamchatka Peninsula. Strain 41(T) was found to be a Gram-positive bacterium, its cells being short, straight, motile rods. Chains of three to five cells were often observed. The isolate grew only chemolithoautotrophically on CO, producing equimolar quantities of H2 and CO2 (according to the equation CO+H2O --> CO2+H2). Growth was observed in the temperature range 40-68 degrees C, with an optimum at 58 degrees C, and in the pH range 6.5-7.6, with an optimum at pH 7.0. The generation time under optimal conditions for chemolithotrophic growth was 1.1 h. The DNA G+C content was 46 +/- 1 mol%. Growth was completely inhibited by penicillin, ampicillin, streptomycin, kanamycin and neomycin. On the basis of the phenotypic and phylogenetic features, it is proposed that this isolate represents a new genus and species, Carboxydocella thermautotrophica gen. nov., sp. nov. (type strain 41(T) = DSM 12356(T) = VKM B-2282(T)).


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Biodiversity of Thermophilic Prokaryotes with Hydrolytic Activities in Hot Springs of Uzon Caldera, Kamchatka (Russia)†

Ilya V. Kublanov; Anna A. Perevalova; G. B. Slobodkina; Aleksander V. Lebedinsky; Salima Kh. Bidzhieva; T. V. Kolganova; Elena N. Kaliberda; L. D. Rumsh; Thomas Haertlé; Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya

ABSTRACT Samples of water from the hot springs of Uzon Caldera with temperatures from 68 to 87°C and pHs of 4.1 to 7.0, supplemented with proteinaceous (albumin, casein, or α- or β-keratin) or carbohydrate (cellulose, carboxymethyl cellulose, chitin, or agarose) biological polymers, were filled with thermal water and incubated at the same sites, with the contents of the tubes freely accessible to the hydrothermal fluid. As a result, several enrichment cultures growing in situ on different polymeric substrates were obtained. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis of 16S rRNA gene fragments obtained after PCR with Bacteria-specific primers showed that the bacterial communities developing on carbohydrates included the genera Caldicellulosiruptor and Dictyoglomus and that those developing on proteins contained members of the Thermotogales order. DGGE analysis performed after PCR with Archaea- and Crenarchaeota-specific primers showed that archaea related to uncultured environmental clones, particularly those of the Crenarchaeota phylum, were present in both carbohydrate- and protein-degrading communities. Five isolates obtained from in situ enrichments or corresponding natural samples of water and sediments represented the bacterial genera Dictyoglomus and Caldanaerobacter as well as new archaea of the Crenarchaeota phylum. Thus, in situ enrichment and consequent isolation showed the diversity of thermophilic prokaryotes competing for biopolymers in microbial communities of terrestrial hot springs.

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A. I. Slobodkin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ilya V. Kublanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. A. Kostrikina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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G. B. Slobodkina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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T. V. Kolganova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. A. Chernyh

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Andrey V. Mardanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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