Title | Microencapsulation and incubation methodology for the cultivation of marine bacteria. |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2022 |
Authors | Pope E, Cartmell C, Haltli B, Ahmadi A, Kerr RG |
Journal | Front Microbiol |
Volume | 13 |
Pagination | 958660 |
Date Published | 2022 |
ISSN | 1664-302X |
Abstract | Environmental microorganisms are important sources of biotechnology innovations; however, the discovery process is hampered by the inability to culture the overwhelming majority of microbes. To drive the discovery of new biotechnology products from previously unculturable microbes, several methods such as modification of media composition, incubation conditions, single-cell isolation, and incubation, have been employed to improve microbial recovery from environmental samples. To improve microbial recovery, we examined the effect of microencapsulation followed by incubation on the abundance, viability, and diversity of bacteria recovered from marine sediment. Bacteria from marine sediment samples were resuspended or encapsulated in agarose and half of each sample was directly plated on agar and the other half inserted into modified Slyde-A-Lyzer™ dialysis cassettes. The cassettes were incubated in their natural environment () for a week, after which they were retrieved, and the contents plated. Colony counts indicated that bacterial abundance increased during incubation and that cell density was significantly higher in cassettes containing non-encapsulated sediment bacteria. Assessment of viability indicated that a higher proportion of cells in encapsulated samples were viable at the end of the incubation period, suggesting that agarose encapsulation promoted higher cell viability during incubation. One hundred and 46 isolates were purified from the study (32-38 from each treatment) to assess the effect of the four treatments on cultivable bacterial diversity. In total, 58 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were identified using a 99% 16S rRNA gene sequence identity threshold. The results indicated that encapsulation recovered greater bacterial diversity from the sediment than simple resuspension (41 vs. 31 OTUs, respectively). While the cultivable bacterial diversity decreased by 43%-48% after incubation, difficult-to-culture () and obligate marine () taxa were only recovered after incubation. These results suggest that agarose encapsulation coupled with incubation in commercially available, low-cost, diffusion chambers facilitates the cultivation and improved recovery of bacteria from marine sediments. This study provides another tool that microbiologists can use to access microbial dark matter for environmental, biotechnology bioprospecting. |
DOI | 10.3389/fmicb.2022.958660 |
Alternate Journal | Front Microbiol |
PubMed ID | 36071955 |
PubMed Central ID | PMC9441948 |
Microencapsulation and incubation methodology for the cultivation of marine bacteria.
Faculty Member Reference:
Christopher Cartmell