Global Information Lookup Global Information

Butyrivibrio information


Butyrivibrio
Scientific classification
Domain:
Bacteria
Phylum:
Bacillota
Class:
Clostridia
Order:
Eubacteriales
Family:
Lachnospiraceae
Genus:
Butyrivibrio

Bryant and Small (1956)
Species

B. crossotus[1]
B. fibrisolvens[1]
B. hungatei[1]
B. proteoclasticus[1]

Butyrivibrio is a genus of bacteria in Class Clostridia. Bacteria of this genus are common in the gastrointestinal systems of many animals. Genus Butyrivibrio was first described by Bryant and Small (1956) as anaerobic, butyric acid-producing, curved rods (or vibroids). Butyrivibrio cells are small, typically 0.4 – 0.6 μm by 2 – 5 μm. They are motile, using a single polar or subpolar monotrichous flagellum. They are commonly found singly or in short chains but it is not unusual for them to form long chains. Despite historically being described as Gram-negative,[2] their cell walls contain derivatives of teichoic acid,[3] and electron microscopy indicates that bacteria of this genus have a Gram-positive cell wall type.[3][4] It is thought that they appear Gram-negative when Gram stained because their cell walls thin to 12 to 18 nm as they reach stationary phase.[4]

Butyrivibrio species are common in the rumens of ruminant animals such as cows, deer and sheep, where they are involved in a number of ruminal functions of agricultural importance in addition to butyrate production.[5] These include fibre degradation, protein breakdown, biohydrogenation of lipids and the production of microbial inhibitors.[6][7][8][9][10] Of particular importance to ruminant digestion, and therefore productivity, is their contribution to the degradation of plant structural carbohydrates, principally hemicellulose.[9][11]

Butyrivibrio species are metabolically versatile and are able to ferment a wide range of sugars[12] and cellodextrins.[13] Some strains have been reported to break down cellulose,[14] although their ability to sustain growth on cellulose appears to be lost during in vitro culturing. Most isolates are amylolytic[15] and are able to degrade xylan by producing xylanolytic[16][17] and esterase enzymes.[18][19] The induction of xylanase enzymes varies between strains; in group D1 strains (49, H17c, 12) xylanase expression appears to be constitutively expressed, while groups B1 (113) and C (CF3) are induced only by growth on xylan, and those of group B2 are induced by growth on xylan or arabinose.[20]

A number of genes encoding glycoside hydrolases (GH) have been identified in Butyrivibrio species including endocellulase (GH family 5 and 9); β-Glucosidase (GH family 3); endoxylanase (GH family 10 and 11); β-Xylosidase (GH family 43); and α-Amylase (GH family 13) enzymes. Several carbohydrate binding modules (CBM) have also been identified that are predicted to bind glycogen (CBM family 48); xylan or chitin (CBM family 2); and starch (CBM family 26).[21][22]

The genus Butyrivibrio encompasses over 60 strains that were originally confined to the species Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens based on their phenotypic and metabolic characteristics. However, phylogenetic analyses based on 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequences has divided the genus Butyrivibrio into six families.[23] These families include the rumen isolates Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens, B. hungateii, B. proteoclasticus, Pseudobutyrivibrio xylanivorans, and P. ruminis and the human isolate B. crossotus. The families B. fibrisolvens, B. crossotus, B. hungateii as well as B. proteoclasticus all belong to the Clostridium sub-cluster XIVa.[24]

  1. ^ a b c d LPSN lpsn.dsmz.de
  2. ^ BRYANT MP; SMALL N (1956). "The anaerobic monotrichous butyric acid-producing curved rod-shaped bacteria of the rumen". Journal of Bacteriology. 72 (1): 16–21. doi:10.1128/JB.72.1.16-21.1956. PMC 289715. PMID 13345769.
  3. ^ a b Cheng, K. J.; Costerton, J. W. (1977). "Ultrastructure of Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens: A gram-positive bacterium". Journal of Bacteriology. 129 (3): 1506–12. doi:10.1128/JB.129.3.1506-1512.1977. PMC 235129. PMID 845122.
  4. ^ a b Beveridge, 1990
  5. ^ Miller & Jenesel, 1979
  6. ^ Blackburn & Hobson, 1962
  7. ^ Kalmokoff & Teather, 1997
  8. ^ Kepler et al., 1966
  9. ^ a b Dehority & Scott, 1967
  10. ^ Polan et al., 1964
  11. ^ Morris & Van Gylswyk, 1980
  12. ^ Stewart et al., 1997
  13. ^ Russell, 1985
  14. ^ Shane et al., 1969
  15. ^ Cotta, 1988
  16. ^ Hespell et al., 1987
  17. ^ Sewell et al., 1988
  18. ^ Hespell & O'Bryan-Shah, 1988
  19. ^ Lin & Thomson, 1991
  20. ^ Hespell & Whitehead, 1990
  21. ^ Krause et al., 2003
  22. ^ Cantarel et al., 2008
  23. ^ Kopecny et al., 2003 (fig. 1.1)
  24. ^ Willems et al., 1996

and 21 Related for: Butyrivibrio information

Request time (Page generated in 0.6494 seconds.)

Butyrivibrio

Last Update:

Butyrivibrio is a genus of bacteria in Class Clostridia. Bacteria of this genus are common in the gastrointestinal systems of many animals. Genus Butyrivibrio...

Word Count : 691

Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus

Last Update:

Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus is a bacterium from the family Lachnospiraceae originally described in the genus Clostridium. Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus...

Word Count : 351

Butyrivibrio hungatei

Last Update:

Butyrivibrio hungatei is a species of Gram-negative, anaerobic, non-spore-forming, butyrate-producing  bacteria. It is curved rod-shaped and motile by...

Word Count : 290

Clostridium leptum

Last Update:

Bacteroidaceae and Butyrivibrio and Descriptions Of desulfomonas gen. nov. And Ten New Species in the Genera Desulfomonas, Butyrivibrio, Eubacterium, Clostridium...

Word Count : 227

Hexose

Last Update:

organisms; however, L-altrose has been isolated from strains of the bacterium Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens. When drawn in this order, the Fischer projections of the...

Word Count : 1908

Dicarboxylic acid

Last Update:

near the centre of the carbon chain have been discovered in the genus Butyrivibrio, bacteria which participate in the digestion of cellulose in the rumen...

Word Count : 3126

Lachnospiraceae

Last Update:

Anaerosacchariphilus Anaerostipes Anaerotaenia Anaerotignum Blautia Butyrivibrio Catenibacillus Catonella Cellulosilyticum Coprococcus Cuneatibacter Dorea...

Word Count : 737

Rumen

Last Update:

abundant bacteria present in the rumen microbiome include Prevotella, Butyrivibrio, and Ruminococcus. This is due to ruminant organisms ingesting high-forage...

Word Count : 3122

Methanogens in digestive tract of ruminants

Last Update:

xylanolytic bacteria producing formates, acetates, hydrogen and succinates. Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens is a proteolytic, cellulolytic, xylanolytic microbe producing...

Word Count : 663

Gram stain

Last Update:

pattern: a mix of pink and purple cells are seen. In cultures of Bacillus, Butyrivibrio, and Clostridium, a decrease in peptidoglycan thickness during growth...

Word Count : 2784

Pseudobutyrivibrio xylanivorans

Last Update:

BAA-455T). xylanivorans means xylan-digesting. Kopecny, J. (2003). "Butyrivibrio hungatei sp. nov. and Pseudobutyrivibrio xylanivorans sp. nov., butyrate-producing...

Word Count : 220

Altrose

Last Update:

However, L-altrose has been isolated from strains of the bacterium Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens. Altrose is a C-3 epimer of mannose. The ring conformation...

Word Count : 149

Pseudobutyrivibrio

Last Update:

Lachnospiraceae. Pseudobutyrivibrio as Gram-negative, is in contrast to Butyrivibrio, which is Gram-positive, as is typical of most Bacillota phylum bacteria...

Word Count : 193

Glutamine synthetase

Last Update:

(GSIII) have, currently, only been found in Bacteroides fragilis and in Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens. It is a double-ringed dodecamer of identical chains. It...

Word Count : 3063

Butyric acid

Last Update:

Clostridium pasteurianum Faecalibacterium prausnitzii Fusobacterium nucleatum Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens Eubacterium limosum The pathway starts with the glycolytic...

Word Count : 6421

List of bacteria genera

Last Update:

"Clostridiia" "Lachnospirales" Lachnospiraceae "Douglasillus" Heller 1922 Butyrivibrio Bryant & Small 1956 Bacillota A "Clostridiia" "Lachnospirales" Lachnospiraceae...

Word Count : 510

Fibrolytic bacterium

Last Update:

BACTERIA (CELLULYTIC AND HEMICELLULYTIC) GRAM- GRAM+ Bacteroides ruminicola Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens Bacteroides succinogenes Eubacterium cellulosolvens Fibrobacter...

Word Count : 1324

Linoleate isomerase

Last Update:

properties of a linoleate delta-12-cis, delta-11-trans-isomerase from Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens". J. Biol. Chem. 242 (24): 5686–92. PMID 5633396. Portal:...

Word Count : 131

Clostridium aminophilum

Last Update:

of Clostridium aminophilum F to the butyrivibriocin-like substance of Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens JL5 and monensin". FEMS Microbiol Lett. 209 (1): 93–8. doi:10...

Word Count : 270

List of Clostridium species

Last Update:

2017 Genus Blautia: Clostridium coccoides, reassigned in 2008. Genus Butyrivibrio: Clostridium proteoclasticum, reassigned in 2008. Genus Cellulosilyticum:...

Word Count : 990

Haloacetate dehalogenase

Last Update:

Moraxella species strain B was transferred into the rumen bacterium Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens and expressed in vitro at sufficiently high levels to detoxify...

Word Count : 464

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net