The strict anaerobe Bacteroides fragilis grows in and benefits from nanomolar concentrations of oxygen
Anthony D. Baughn and
Michael H. Malamy ()
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Anthony D. Baughn: Tufts University School of Medicine
Michael H. Malamy: Tufts University School of Medicine
Nature, 2004, vol. 427, issue 6973, 441-444
Abstract:
Abstract Strict anaerobes cannot grow in the presence of greater than 5 µM dissolved oxygen1. Despite this growth inhibition, many strict anaerobes of the Bacteroides class of eubacteria can survive in oxygenated environments until the partial pressure of O2 ( p O 2 ) is sufficiently reduced. For example, the periodontal pathogens Porphyromonas gingivalis and Tannerella forsythensis colonize subgingival plaques of mammals, whereas several other Bacteroides species colonize the gastrointestinal tract of animals. It has been suggested that pre-colonization of these sites by facultative anaerobes is essential for reduction of the p O 2 and subsequent colonization by strict anaerobes2. However, this model is inconsistent with the observation that Bacteroides fragilis can colonize the colon in the absence of facultative anaerobes3. Thus, this strict anaerobe may have a role in reduction of the environmental p O 2 . Although some strictly anaerobic bacteria can consume oxygen through an integral membrane electron transport system4, the physiological role of this system has not been established in these organisms. Here we demonstrate that B. fragilis encodes a cytochrome bd oxidase that is essential for O2 consumption and is required, under some conditions, for the stimulation of growth in the presence of nanomolar concentrations of O2. Furthermore, our data suggest that this property is conserved in many other organisms that have been described as strict anaerobes.
Date: 2004
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DOI: 10.1038/nature02285
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