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Active Sulfate-Reducing Bacterial Community in the Camel Gut.

Olga V KarnachukInna A PanovaVasilii L PanovOlga P IkkertVitaly V KadnikovIgor I RusanovMarat R AvakyanLubov B GlukhovaAnastasia P LukinaAnatolii V RakitinShahjahon BegmatovAlexey V BeletskyNikolai V PimenovNikolai V Ravin
Published in: Microorganisms (2023)
The diversity and activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in the camel gut remains largely unexplored. An abundant SRB community has been previously revealed in the feces of Bactrian camels ( Camelus bactrianus ). This study aims to combine the 16S rRNA gene profiling, sulfate reduction rate (SRR) measurement with a radioactive tracer, and targeted cultivation to shed light on SRB activity in the camel gut. Fresh feces of 55 domestic Bactrian camels grazing freely on semi-arid mountain pastures in the Kosh-Agach district of the Russian Altai area were analyzed. Feces were sampled in early winter at an ambient temperature of -15 °C, which prevented possible contamination. SRR values measured with a radioactive tracer in feces were relatively high and ranged from 0.018 to 0.168 nmol S cm -3 day -1 . The 16S rRNA gene profiles revealed the presence of Gram-negative Desulfovibrionaceae and spore-forming Desulfotomaculaceae . Targeted isolation allowed us to obtain four pure culture isolates belonging to Desulfovibrio and Desulforamulus . An active SRB community may affect the iron and copper availability in the camel intestine due to metal ions precipitation in the form of sparingly soluble sulfides. The copper-iron sulfide, chalcopyrite (CuFeS 2 ), was detected by X-ray diffraction in 36 out of 55 analyzed camel feces. In semi-arid areas, gypsum, like other evaporite sulfates, can be used as a solid-phase electron acceptor for sulfate reduction in the camel gastrointestinal tract.
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