| Literature DB >> 23486535 |
Marta Diaz-Herraiz1, Valme Jurado, Soledad Cuezva, Leonila Laiz, Pasquino Pallecchi, Piero Tiano, Sergio Sanchez-Moral, Cesareo Saiz-Jimenez.
Abstract
The paintings from Tomba della Scimmia, in Tuscany, are representative of the heavy bacterial colonization experienced in most Etruscan necropolises. The tomb remained open until the late 70's when it was closed because of severe deterioration of the walls, ceiling and paintings after decades of visits. The deterioration is the result of environmental changes and impacts suffered since its discovery in 1846. We show scanning electron microscopy and molecular studies that reveal the extent and nature of the biodeterioration. Actinobacteria, mainly Nocardia and Pseudonocardia colonize and grow on the tomb walls and this process is linked to the availability of organic matter, phyllosilicates (e.g. clay minerals) and iron oxides. Nocardia is found metabolically active in the paintings. The data confirm the specialization of the genera Nocardia and Pseudonocardia in the colonization of subterranean niches.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23486535 PMCID: PMC3595702 DOI: 10.1038/srep01440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Painting in Tomba della Scimmia, Chiusi, Italy.
Figure 2Painting heavily colonized by actinobacteria.
(a) Sample SC3 was taken from the right leg. (b) Sample SC6 was taken from the whitish area.
Figure 3Environmental scanning electron micrographs of white colonizations from Tomba della Scimmia (a–c) and from Ardales Cave (d–f).
(a) Bed formed of CaCO3 nest-like aggregates (white arrow) with dispersed spheroidal elements (black arrows) from Tomba della Scimmia. (b) Small patches of CaCO3 nest-like aggregates and filaments from Tomba della Scimmia. (c) Detail of spheroidal elements of CaCO3 coated with filamentous bacteria from Tomba della Scimmia. Similar mineral and biological morphologies were observed in Ardales Cave walls and sediments colonized by Pseudonocardia8 as shown in d–f. (d) A bed of nest-like aggregates and spheroidal elements in Ardales Cave. (e) Small patches of CaCO3 nest-like aggregates and filaments in Ardales Cave. (f) Spheroidal CaCO3 coated with filaments in Ardales Cave.
Figure 4Distribution of major phylogenetic groups in the 16S rRNA gene clone library constructed from Tomba della Scimmia SC3 and SC6 samples.