Archives of Microbiology, volume 175, issue 6, pages 462-465

Growth of the purple bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus on the aromatic compound hippurate

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2001-06-01
scimago Q2
SJR0.589
CiteScore4.9
Impact factor2.3
ISSN03028933, 1432072X
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
General Medicine
Genetics
Microbiology
Abstract
The purple nonsulfur bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus strain B10 grew phototrophically on the aromatic compound hippurate (N-benzoyl-L-glycine) and related benzoyl amino acids. Absorption spectra, extraction, and GC/MS analysis of culture supernatants showed that hippurate was stoichiometrically converted to benzoate and glycine, with the latter used as a carbon or nitrogen source for growth. This conclusion was supported by detection of the enzyme hippuricase in permeabilized intact cells. Chemotrophic growth on hippurate by Rba. capsulatus, either at full or reduced oxygen tensions, was not observed. The type strain of Rhodobacter sphaeroides as well as four strains of Rhodopseudomonas palustris also grew phototrophically on hippurate, while several other aromatic-degrading species of purple bacteria did not.

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