Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau

Microbial lipids, which are also known as single cell oils (SCO), are produced by oleaginous microorganisms including oleaginous bacteria, yeast, fungus and algae through converting carbohydrates into lipids under certain conditions. Due to its unique environment having extremely low temperature and anoxia, the Tibetan Plateau is amongst the regions with numerous rare ecotypes such as arid desert, salt marsh, alpine permafrost, hot spring, and lawn. By using a rapid, convenient screening method, we identified 31 strains of oleaginous microorganisms from different habitats in the Tibetan Plateau, which include wetlands, lawn, hot spring, alpine permafrost, and saline-alkali soil. Molecular identity analysis showed that they belong to 15 different species, 7 of which are reported for the first time as lipid-producing microorganisms, that is, Cladosporium sp., Gibberella fujikuro, Ochrobactrum sp., Plectosphaerella sp., Tilletiopsis albescens, Backusella ctenidia, and Davidiella tassiana. The distribution of the oleaginous microorganisms varies with habitats. 11 strains were found in hot spring (35.5%), 10 in farmland (32.3%), 6 in lawn (19.4%), 2 in sand (6.4%), 1 in wetland (3.2%), and 1 in permafrost (3.2%). Carbon utilization analysis indicated that most of these filamentous fungi can use xylose and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) as carbon source, where Backusella ctenidia, Fusarium sp. and Gibberella fujikuroi have the strongest capability.

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Main Authors: Li,Shi Lin, Lin,Qiang, Li,Xin Ran, Xu,Hui, Yang,Yun Xi, Qiao,Dai Rong, Cao,Yi
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia 2012
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-83822012000200026
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spelling oai:scielo:S1517-838220120002000262012-08-07Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan PlateauLi,Shi LinLin,QiangLi,Xin RanXu,HuiYang,Yun XiQiao,Dai RongCao,Yi oleaginous microorganisms screening the Tibetan Plateau biodiversity Microbial lipids, which are also known as single cell oils (SCO), are produced by oleaginous microorganisms including oleaginous bacteria, yeast, fungus and algae through converting carbohydrates into lipids under certain conditions. Due to its unique environment having extremely low temperature and anoxia, the Tibetan Plateau is amongst the regions with numerous rare ecotypes such as arid desert, salt marsh, alpine permafrost, hot spring, and lawn. By using a rapid, convenient screening method, we identified 31 strains of oleaginous microorganisms from different habitats in the Tibetan Plateau, which include wetlands, lawn, hot spring, alpine permafrost, and saline-alkali soil. Molecular identity analysis showed that they belong to 15 different species, 7 of which are reported for the first time as lipid-producing microorganisms, that is, Cladosporium sp., Gibberella fujikuro, Ochrobactrum sp., Plectosphaerella sp., Tilletiopsis albescens, Backusella ctenidia, and Davidiella tassiana. The distribution of the oleaginous microorganisms varies with habitats. 11 strains were found in hot spring (35.5%), 10 in farmland (32.3%), 6 in lawn (19.4%), 2 in sand (6.4%), 1 in wetland (3.2%), and 1 in permafrost (3.2%). Carbon utilization analysis indicated that most of these filamentous fungi can use xylose and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) as carbon source, where Backusella ctenidia, Fusarium sp. and Gibberella fujikuroi have the strongest capability.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSociedade Brasileira de MicrobiologiaBrazilian Journal of Microbiology v.43 n.2 20122012-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-83822012000200026en10.1590/S1517-83822012000200026
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Li,Shi Lin
Lin,Qiang
Li,Xin Ran
Xu,Hui
Yang,Yun Xi
Qiao,Dai Rong
Cao,Yi
spellingShingle Li,Shi Lin
Lin,Qiang
Li,Xin Ran
Xu,Hui
Yang,Yun Xi
Qiao,Dai Rong
Cao,Yi
Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau
author_facet Li,Shi Lin
Lin,Qiang
Li,Xin Ran
Xu,Hui
Yang,Yun Xi
Qiao,Dai Rong
Cao,Yi
author_sort Li,Shi Lin
title Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau
title_short Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau
title_full Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau
title_fullStr Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau
title_full_unstemmed Biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in Tibetan Plateau
title_sort biodiversity of the oleaginous microorganisms in tibetan plateau
description Microbial lipids, which are also known as single cell oils (SCO), are produced by oleaginous microorganisms including oleaginous bacteria, yeast, fungus and algae through converting carbohydrates into lipids under certain conditions. Due to its unique environment having extremely low temperature and anoxia, the Tibetan Plateau is amongst the regions with numerous rare ecotypes such as arid desert, salt marsh, alpine permafrost, hot spring, and lawn. By using a rapid, convenient screening method, we identified 31 strains of oleaginous microorganisms from different habitats in the Tibetan Plateau, which include wetlands, lawn, hot spring, alpine permafrost, and saline-alkali soil. Molecular identity analysis showed that they belong to 15 different species, 7 of which are reported for the first time as lipid-producing microorganisms, that is, Cladosporium sp., Gibberella fujikuro, Ochrobactrum sp., Plectosphaerella sp., Tilletiopsis albescens, Backusella ctenidia, and Davidiella tassiana. The distribution of the oleaginous microorganisms varies with habitats. 11 strains were found in hot spring (35.5%), 10 in farmland (32.3%), 6 in lawn (19.4%), 2 in sand (6.4%), 1 in wetland (3.2%), and 1 in permafrost (3.2%). Carbon utilization analysis indicated that most of these filamentous fungi can use xylose and carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC) as carbon source, where Backusella ctenidia, Fusarium sp. and Gibberella fujikuroi have the strongest capability.
publisher Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia
publishDate 2012
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-83822012000200026
work_keys_str_mv AT lishilin biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
AT linqiang biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
AT lixinran biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
AT xuhui biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
AT yangyunxi biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
AT qiaodairong biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
AT caoyi biodiversityoftheoleaginousmicroorganismsintibetanplateau
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