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Dive into the research topics where Olga V. Karnachuk is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga V. Karnachuk.


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.


Microbiology | 2003

Microbial Processes of the Carbon and Sulfur Cycles in Lake Shira (Khakasia)

N. V. Pimenov; Igor I Rusanov; Olga V. Karnachuk; D. Yu. Rogozin; I. A. Bryantseva; O. N. Lunina; S. K. Yusupov; V. P. Parnachev; M. V. Ivanov

Microbiological and biogeochemical studies of the meromictic saline Lake Shira (Khakasia) were conducted. In the upper part of the hydrogen-sulfide zone, at a depth of 13.5–14 m, there was a pale pink layer of water due to the development of purple bacteria (6 × 105 cells/ml), which were assigned by their morphological and spectral characteristics toLamprocystis purpurea (formerly Amoebobacter purpureus). In August, the production of organic matter (OM) in Lake Shira was estimated to be 943 mg C/(m2day). The contribution of anoxygenic photosynthesis was insignificant (about 7% of the total OM production). The share of bacterial chemosynthesis was still less (no more than 2%). In the anaerobic zone, the community of sulfate-reducing bacteria played a decisive role in the terminal decomposition of OM. The maximal rates of sulfate reduction were observed in the near-bottom water (114 μg S/(l day)) and in the surface layer of bottom sediments (901 μg S/(dm3 day)). The daily expenditure of Corg for sulfate reduction was 73% of Corg formed daily in the processes of oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynthesis and bacterial chemosynthesis. The profile of methane distribution in the water column and bottom sediments was typical of meromictic reservoirs. The methane content in the water column increased beginning with the thermocline (7–8 m) and reached maximum values in the near-bottom water (17 μl/l). In bottom sediments, the greatest methane concentrations (57 μl/l) were observed in the surface layer (0–3 cm). The integral rate of methane formation in the water column and bottom sediments was almost an order of magnitude higher than the rate of its oxidation by aerobic and anaerobic methanotrophic microorganisms.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Genome Sequence of Desulfosporosinus sp. OT, an Acidophilic Sulfate-Reducing Bacterium from Copper Mining Waste in Norilsk, Northern Siberia

Helge K. Abicht; Stefano Mancini; Olga V. Karnachuk; Marc Solioz

We have sequenced the genome of Desulfosporosinus sp. OT, a Gram-positive, acidophilic sulfate-reducing Firmicute isolated from copper tailing sediment in the Norilsk mining-smelting area in Northern Siberia, Russia. This represents the first sequenced genome of a Desulfosporosinus species. The genome has a size of 5.7 Mb and encodes 6,222 putative proteins.


Microbiology | 2006

Distribution, diversity, and activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria in the water column in Gek-Gel Lake, Azerbaijan

Olga V. Karnachuk; N. V. Pimenov; S. K. Yusupov; Yu. A. Frank; Ya. A. Puhakka; M. V. Ivanov

The distribution and activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in the water column of the alpine meromictic Gek-Gel lake were studied. Apart from traditional microbiological methods based on cultivation and on measuring the process rates with radioactive labels, in situ fluorescent hybridization (FISH) was used, which enables identification and quantification without cultivating organisms. The peak rate of sulfate reduction, 0.486 µg S 1−1 day−1, was found in the chemocline at 33 m. The peak SRB number of 2.5×106 cells/ml, as determined by the most probable number method on selective media, was found at the same depth. The phylogenetic affiliation of the SRB, as determined by FISH, revealed the predominance of the Desulfovibrio spp., Desulfobulbus spp., and Desulfoarculus spp./Desulfomonile spp. groups. The numbers of spore-forming Desulfotomaculum spp. increased with depth. The low measured rates of sulfate reduction accompanied by high SRB numbers and the predominance of the groups capable of reducing a wide range of substrates permit us to assume utilization of electron acceptors other than sulfate as the main activity of the SRB in the water column.


Microbiology | 2009

Bacteria of the sulfur cycle in the sediments of gold mine tailings, Kuznetsk Basin, Russia

Olga V. Karnachuk; Anna L. Gerasimchuk; David Banks; Bjørn Frengstad; G. A. Stykon; Z. L. Tikhonova; A. Kaksonen; J. Puhakka; A. S. Yanenko; N. V. Pimenov

The number and diversity of culturable microorganisms involved in sulfur oxidation and sulfate reduction were investigated in the oxidized sediments of gold mine tailings, Kuznetsk Basin, Russia. The sediments had a low pH (2.4–2.8), high SO42− content (up to 22 g/l), and high concentrations of dissolved metals. The arsenic content was as high as 1.9 g/l. Bacterial phylogeny in microcosms was investigated by amplification of 16S rRNA gene fragments with subsequent denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). Spore-forming bacteria Desulfosporosinus were the only bacteria revealed for which the capacity for dissimilatory sulfate reduction is known. Strain Desulfosporosinus sp. DB was obtained in pure culture, and it was phylogenetically remote from other cultured and uncultured members of the genus. No sulfate-reducing members of the Deltaproteobacteria were detected. The Firmicutes members were the most numerous phylotypes in the microcosms, including a separate cluster with the similarity to Pelotomaculum not exceeding 94%. Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and A. caldus were found in anaerobic and microaerophilic microcosms. The number of sulfate reducers did not exceed 9.5 × 102 cells/ml.


Microbiology | 2010

The search for sulfate-reducing bacteria in mat samples from the lost city hydrothermal field by molecular cloning

Anna L. Gerasimchuk; A. A. Shatalov; A. L. Novikov; O. P. Butorova; N. V. Pimenov; A. Yu. Lein; A. S. Yanenko; Olga V. Karnachuk

The work is dedicated to searching for microorganisms of the domain Bacteria capable of dissimilatory sulfate reduction in the samples of microbial mats from a carbonate chimney in the Lost City hydro-thermal field. Cloning of 16S rRNA genes, the universal phylogenetic marker, and dsrAB, the functional marker for sulfate reduction, revealed phylotypes related to spore-forming Desulfotomaculum. No members of the Deltaproteobacteria, comprising the most numerous bacterial group with demonstrated capacity for dissimilatory sulfate reduction, were found. The phylogenetic position of 16S rRNA clones from the mats suggests that this microbial community is a unique consortium, where the energy flow is related to hydrogen of hydrothermal origin, while mass growth of primary produces results from utilization of sulfide formed by sulfate-and sulfur-reducing microorganisms.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2015

Draft genome sequence of the first acid-tolerant sulfate-reducing deltaproteobacterium Desulfovibrio sp. TomC having potential for minewater treatment

Olga V. Karnachuk; Andrey V. Mardanov; Marat R. Avakyan; Vitaly V. Kadnikov; Maria Vlasova; Alexey V. Beletsky; Anna L. Gerasimchuk; Nikolai V. Ravin

The sulfidogenic bacterium Desulfovibrio sp. TomC was isolated from acidic waste at the abandoned gold ore mining site in the Martaiga gold ore belt, Western Siberia. This bacterium, being the first reported acid-tolerant gram-negative sulfate-reducer of the order Deltaproteobacteria, is able to grow at pH as low as 2.5 and is resistant to high concentrations of metals. The draft 5.3 Mb genome sequence of Desulfovibrio sp. TomC has been established and provides the genetic basis for application of this microorganism in bioreactors and other bioremediation schemes for the treatment of metal-containing wastewater.


Geomicrobiology Journal | 2016

Firmicutes is an Important Component of Microbial Communities in Water-Injected and Pristine Oil Reservoirs, Western Siberia, Russia

Yulia A. Frank; David Banks; Marat Avakian; Dmitry V. Antsiferov; Petr Kadychagov; Olga V. Karnachuk

ABSTRACT The dominant microbial components of fluids from wells in pristine and water-injected, high-temperature, Western Siberian oil fields, were analyzed by PCR-DGGE. Particular emphasis was placed on sulphate-reducing organisms, due to their ecological and industrial importance. Bacterial phylotypes obtained from the non-water-injected Stolbovoye oil field were more diverse than those from the Samotlor field, which is subject to secondary oil recovery by reinjection of recycled production water. The majority of phylotypes from both sites were related to Firmicutes. The low similarity to their closest relatives indicates unique bacterial communities in deep underground production waters and crude oil. Archaeal phylotypes detected only in the Samotlor samples were represented by Methanosarcinales and Methanobacteriales.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Genome Sequence of Desulfovibrio sp. A2, a Highly Copper Resistant, Sulfate-Reducing Bacterium Isolated from Effluents of a Zinc Smelter at the Urals

Stefano Mancini; Helge K. Abicht; Olga V. Karnachuk; Marc Solioz

Desulfovibrio sp. A2 is an anaerobic gram-negative sulfate-reducing bacterium with remarkable tolerance to copper. It was isolated from wastewater effluents of a zinc smelter at the Urals. Here, we report the 4.2-Mb draft genome sequence of Desulfovibrio sp. A2 and identify potential copper resistance mechanisms.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2002

Alkaline mine drainage from metal sulphide and coal mines: examples from Svalbard and Siberia

David A. Banks; Valery P. Parnachev; Bjørn Frengstad; Wayne Holden; Anatoly A. Vedernikov; Olga V. Karnachuk

Abstract Not all water from coal or metal mines is acidic. Circum-neutral or alkaline mine drainage may be due to: (i) a low content of sulphide minerals; (ii) the presence of monosulphides rather than pyrite or marcasite; (iii) a large pyrite grain-size limiting oxidation rate; (iv) neutralization of acid by carbonate or basic silicate minerals; (v) engineering factors (introduction of lime dust for explosion prevention; cement or rock flour during construction works); (vi) neutralization of acid by naturally highly alkaline groundwaters; (vii) circulating water not coming into effective contact with sulphide minerals; and (viii) oxygen not coming into direct contact with sulphide minerals or influent water being highly reducing.

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Andrey V. Mardanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alexey V. Beletsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Vitaly V. Kadnikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. V. Pimenov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Nikolai V. Ravin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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N. V. Ravin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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