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1 May 2002 Morphological, Small Subunit rRNA, and Physiological Characterization of Trimyema minutum (Kahl, 1931), an Anaerobic Ciliate from Submarine Hydrothermal Vents Growing from 28 °C to 52 °C
MANUELA BAUMGARTNER, KARL O. STETTER, WILHELM FOISSNER
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Abstract

A thermophilic strain of Trimyema minutum was isolated from the hydrothermally heated sea floor at Vulcano Island (Italy) and cultivated monoxenically on Marinobacter sp. and Methanococcus thermolithotrophicus. It can be propagated strictly anaerobically and is sensitive to oxygen: if exposed to air at 48 °C all cells die within 60 min. It grows from 0.45–7.2% (w/v) salt and at pH 6.0–8.0. The isolate is the most extreme thermophilic ciliate which ever has been cultivated, exhibiting an optimal growth temperature of 48 °C (doubling time 6 h). Growth occurs between 28 °C and 52 °C. Trimyema minutum is redescribed using live observation and silver impregnation. Its morphology and the small subunit ribosomal RNA sequence is distinctly different from that of T. compressum, but morphology is highly similar to that of T. shoalsia Nerad et al. 1995, which is thus probably a junior synonym of T. minutum. To stabilize the bewildering species taxonomy in Trimyema, we suggest to recognize our population as a neotype of T. minutum.

MANUELA BAUMGARTNER, KARL O. STETTER, and WILHELM FOISSNER "Morphological, Small Subunit rRNA, and Physiological Characterization of Trimyema minutum (Kahl, 1931), an Anaerobic Ciliate from Submarine Hydrothermal Vents Growing from 28 °C to 52 °C," The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 49(3), 227-238, (1 May 2002). https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1550-7408.2002.tb00527.x
Received: 27 August 2001; Accepted: 25 March 2002; Published: 1 May 2002
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KEYWORDS
18S rRNA
marine
monoxenic culture
physiology
taxonomy
thermophilic
Vulcano Island
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