학술논문

Biotransformation of Various Saccharides and Production of Exopolymeric Substances by Cloud-Borne Bacillus sp. 3B6.
Document Type
Article
Source
Environmental Science & Technology. 12/16/2014, Vol. 48 Issue 24, p14238-14247. 10p.
Subject
*BIOTRANSFORMATION in microorganisms
*BACILLUS (Bacteria)
*MATERIAL biodegradation
*POLYMERIC composites
*BACTERIAL cultures
*SACCHARIDES
*NUCLEAR magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Language
ISSN
0013-936X
Abstract
The ability of Bacillus sp. 3B6, a bacterial strain isolated from cloud waters, to biotransform saccharides present in the atmosphere was evaluated using in situ 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy. Bacillus is one of the genera most frequently described in the air and in atmospheric waters. Sugars present in these environments have a biogenic origin; they include alditols, monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Bacillus sp. 3B6 was able to efficiently metabolize sugars, which could thus provide sources of energy for this bacterium and allow it to live and to be metabolically active in warm clouds. In addition, a number of these saccharides (L-arabitol, D-fructose, sucrose, D-glucose, cellotetraose, cellulose, and starch) were transformed to EPSs (exopolymeric substances). We have clearly identified the structure of two EPSs as 1,6-α-galactan and partially acetylated polyethylene glycol. 1,6-α-Galactan is a newly described polymer. The production of EPSs might protect this bacterium under hostile cloud environment conditions, including low nutrient availability, cold temperature and freeze-thaw processes, UV and radical exposure, and evaporation-condensation processes and thus desiccation and osmolarity changes. EPSs could also have a potential role in atmospheric processes because they can be considered as secondary organic aerosols and efficient cloud condensation nuclei. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]