Literature DB >> 17308177

Isolation and characterization of bacteria capable of tolerating the extreme conditions of clean room environments.

Myron T La Duc1, Anne Dekas, Shariff Osman, Christine Moissl, David Newcombe, Kasthuri Venkateswaran.   

Abstract

In assessing the bacterial populations present in spacecraft assembly, spacecraft test, and launch preparation facilities, extremophilic bacteria (requiring severe conditions for growth) and extremotolerant bacteria (tolerant to extreme conditions) were isolated. Several cultivation approaches were employed to select for and identify bacteria that not only survive the nutrient-limiting conditions of clean room environments but can also withstand even more inhospitable environmental stresses. Due to their proximity to spacefaring objects, these bacteria pose a considerable risk for forward contamination of extraterrestrial sites. Samples collected from four geographically distinct National Aeronautics and Space Administration clean rooms were challenged with UV-C irradiation, 5% hydrogen peroxide, heat shock, pH extremes (pH 3.0 and 11.0), temperature extremes (4 degrees C to 65 degrees C), and hypersalinity (25% NaCl) prior to and/or during cultivation as a means of selecting for extremotolerant bacteria. Culture-independent approaches were employed to measure viable microbial (ATP-based) and total bacterial (quantitative PCR-based) burdens. Intracellular ATP concentrations suggested a viable microbial presence ranging from below detection limits to 10(6) cells/m(2). However, only 0.1 to 55% of these viable cells were able to grow on defined culture medium. Isolated members of the Bacillaceae family were more physiologically diverse than those reported in previous studies, including thermophiles (Geobacillus), obligate anaerobes (Paenibacillus), and halotolerant, alkalophilic species (Oceanobacillus and Exiguobacterium). Non-spore-forming microbes (alpha- and beta-proteobacteria and actinobacteria) exhibiting tolerance to the selected stresses were also encountered. The multiassay cultivation approach employed herein enhances the current understanding of the physiological diversity of bacteria housed in these clean rooms and leads us to ponder the origin and means of translocation of thermophiles, anaerobes, and halotolerant alkalophiles into these environments.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17308177      PMCID: PMC1855582          DOI: 10.1128/AEM.03007-06

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol        ISSN: 0099-2240            Impact factor:   4.792


  30 in total

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8.  Survival of spacecraft-associated microorganisms under simulated martian UV irradiation.

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2.  Pyrosequencing-derived bacterial, archaeal, and fungal diversity of spacecraft hardware destined for Mars.

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6.  Effect of shadowing on survival of bacteria under conditions simulating the Martian atmosphere and UV radiation.

Authors:  Shariff Osman; Zan Peeters; Myron T La Duc; Rocco Mancinelli; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Kasthuri Venkateswaran
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7.  Cultivation of anaerobic and facultatively anaerobic bacteria from spacecraft-associated clean rooms.

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8.  Comprehensive census of bacteria in clean rooms by using DNA microarray and cloning methods.

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9.  Diversity of anaerobic microbes in spacecraft assembly clean rooms.

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