Dispelling the “Nocardia amarae” myth: a phylogenetic and phenotypic study of mycolic acid-containing actinomycetes isolated from activated sludge foam

2002 ◽  
Vol 46 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 81-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
F.M. Stainsby ◽  
J. Soddell ◽  
R. Seviour ◽  
J. Upton ◽  
M. Goodfellow

Right-angle branched filaments and rods micromanipulated from activated sludge foam and mixed liquor were identified as putatively novel members of the genera Gordonia, Mycobacterium and Rhodococcus using a combination of chemical, molecular and morphological data. Pyrolysis mass spectrometric analyses of gordoniae isolated in both the present and a previous study revealed pyro-groups, distinct from validly described Gordonia species, which could be equated with those based on morphological properties and 16S rDNA data. Putative gordoniae assigned to one of these groups were found to be closely related to strains currently identified as “Rhodococcus australis”. These strains were also found to have properties consistent with their classification in the genus Gordonia. The results of this study highlight the limitations of the microscopic approach to filament identification and cast further doubt on the view that foaming can be attributed to members of one or a few Nocardia species.

1998 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 87-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Goi ◽  
K. Odagawa ◽  
T. Nishimura ◽  
T. Okoch ◽  
H. Yuzawa

In order to prevent the scum generation due to Gordona (Nocardia) amarae, experiments were made to add ozone in the aeration tank from 1990 to 1994, and scum suppression effects, sludge settleability improvement effects, etc. were reported. The studies made so far did not clarify the scum suppression mechanism of added ozone. Based on the measurements of the number of Gordona, mycolic acid, etc., an attempt was made to investigate this mechanism. By adding ozone, the number of Gordona was suppressed in general to below 1 × 105 CFU/mg-SS. In the presence of mycolic acid produced by Gordona amarae at a rate of about 178-236 μg in 1g activated sludge, no scum generation was seen. Within an experimental range of ozone added at a rate below 3 mg/l, it was considered that the scum suppression effect was due more to the decomposition of mycolic acid, which is a metabolite of Gordona amarae, than to the effect of the number of Gordona amarae being reduced by the disinfectant action of ozone.


2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. S. Fatima ◽  
S. Jamal Khan

In this study, the performance of wastewater treatment plant located at sector I-9 Islamabad, Pakistan, was evaluated. This full scale domestic wastewater treatment plant is based on conventional activated sludge process. The parameters which were monitored regularly included total suspended solids (TSS), mixed liquor suspended solids (MLSS), mixed liquor volatile suspended solids (MLVSS), biological oxygen demand (BOD), and chemical oxygen demand (COD). It was found that the biological degradation efficiency of the plant was below the desired levels in terms of COD and BOD. Also the plant operators were not maintaining consistent sludge retention time (SRT). Abrupt discharge of MLSS through the Surplus Activated sludge (SAS) pump was the main reason for the low MLSS in the aeration tank and consequently low treatment performance. In this study the SRT was optimized based on desired MLSS concentration between 3,000–3,500 mg/L and required performance in terms of BOD, COD and TSS. This study revealed that SRT is a very important operational parameter and its knowledge and correct implementation by the plant operators should be mandatory.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (15) ◽  
pp. 2326-2338
Author(s):  
Majdala Mansour-Geoffrion ◽  
Peter L. Dold ◽  
Dwight Houweling ◽  
Daniel Lamarre ◽  
Alain Gadbois ◽  
...  

Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (9) ◽  
pp. 1251-1251
Author(s):  
Y. H. Yun ◽  
S. Y. Son ◽  
S. H. Kim

Viburnum sargentii Koehne belongs to the family Caprifoliaceae. It is a deciduous shrub that grows in wet mountainous area in Korea, Japan, and China. On July 2011, rust symptoms were observed on V. sargentii Koehne in Balwang mountain, Gangwon Province, Korea, at an altitude of 1,450 meters. The specimen was coded as DUCC506 and used to study in detail. Rust symptoms were present on leaves, floral axes, and petioles. The infected lesions slightly swelled and leaflets and leaves were distorted. These caused sharp bends in the petioles and wart-like galls on twigs. Defoliation and deflowering could result when infection was severe. The first symptom was small and pale yellow spots on the upper surfaces of the leaves. As the spots increased in size, they turned brown and tanned. Bright orange or yellow powdery masses of spores were produced in tiny cup-like structures that appeared on the undersurfaces of leaves and the surface of floral axes and petioles. Aecia were gregarious, cupulate, yellowish, and erumpent with a peridium having a lacerate, somewhat recurved margin. Peridial cells were hyaline to whitish, rhomboidal, 18 to 25 (avg. 21.5) × 15 to 20 (avg. 18) μm, smooth to finely verrucose, and not observed in aecial stage on floral axes and petioles. Aeciospores were globose to ellipsoid, 14 to 16 (avg. 15.4) × 15 to 16.5 (avg. 16) μm, hyaline to yellowish, with many verrucose surface and hyaline walls. These morphological properties correspond to the aecial stage of Uromyces acuminatus (1,4). From extracted genomic DNA, the D1 and D2 region of 28S ribosomal DNA was amplified with LROR (5′- ACCCGCTGAACTTAAGC-3′) and LR4 (5′-ACCAGAGTTTCCTCTGG- 3′) primer set. The 28S rDNA sequence of DUCC506 was deposited in GenBank DNA database under accession number KC570451. A nucleotide sequence similarity search through BLAST in the GenBank database revealed that the DUCC506's 28S rDNA shared 98% (607/622) similarity with that of U. acuminatus LD1005 (GU058004). Aecidium magnatum Arthur is the anamorph of U. acuminatus (2). Aecial and telial hosts of U. acuminatus belong to several families of Angiosperms and Spartina spp., respectively. No telial host was found near the infected aecial host V. sargentii. These morphological and molecular results support the morphological data to identify DUCC506 specimen is A. magnatum. To our knowledge, this is the first report of rust caused by A. magnatum on V. sargentii in Korea or elsewhere in the world. Rust caused by A. viburni was reported on V. sargentii in Korea without any morphological description (3). Peoples in Asia are interested in this host plant as it is used for ornamental and medicinal purpose. Therefore, our report would be useful information for the management of V. sargentii. References: (1) G. B. Cummins. The Rust Fungi of Cereals, Grasses and Bamboos. Springer-Verlag, New York, 1971. (2) D. F. Farr et al. Fungi on Plants and Plant Products in the United States. Page 1009. American Phytopathological Society Press, St. Paul, MN, 1989. (3) C. J. Kim. Kor. J. Micorbiol. 1:51, 1963. (4) H. Y. Yun et al. Plant Dis. 94:279, 2010.


Author(s):  
R. R. Andreasyan ◽  
H. V. Abrahamyan

It is brought the physical and morphological data of 267 nearby radio galaxies identified with elliptical galaxies brighter than 18th magnitude (sample 1) and for 280 extragalactic radio sources with known position angles between the integrated intrinsic radio polarization and radio axes (sample 2).


1998 ◽  
Vol 37 (12) ◽  
pp. 103-110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krist Gernaey ◽  
Herwig Bogaert ◽  
Peter Vanrolleghem ◽  
Alessandro Massone ◽  
Alberto Rozzi ◽  
...  

A titrimetric method to monitor nitrification was applied on a pilot activated sludge plant for biological N removal. Mixed liquor was sampled from the aerobic compartment of the treatment plant and a titration in-sensor experiment was performed. Interpretation of the cumulative base addition curves resulting from each titration in-sensor experiment was done using both a simple slope extrapolation method and a model-based non-linear parameter estimation method. The NH4+-N concentrations obtained with both methods correlated well with the NH4+-N concentrations measured on the effluent of the pilot plant using an on-line NH4+-N analyser. Contrary to most physical/chemical NH4+-N analysers, no sample pretreatment of the mixed liquor is needed for the measurements. It is shown in detail that interpretation of the titration curves yields information about the nitrification kinetics too, which can be an important advantage for process control purposes.


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