Spirochaeta aurantia, a Pigmented, Facultatively Anaerobic Spirochete

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A strain of Spirochaeta aurantia was isolated from mud by a procedure involving migration of the organisms through cellulose ester filter discs (0.3-μm pore diameter) onto the surface of culture plates. The helical cells measured 0.3 by 10 to 20 μm during exponential growth. Electron microscopy showed the presence of two subterminally inserted axial fibrils partially overlapping in a 1-2-1 arrangement. An outer envelope, exhibiting a polygonal substructure, was observed. The spirochete grew either aerobically or anaerobically, with aerobic yields of 9.8 × 108 cells per ml and anaerobic yields of 3.0 × 108 cells per ml. The organism used carbohydrates, but not amino acids, as energy sources. Amino acids served as sole nitrogen sources, whereas inorganic ammonium salts did not. The presence of biotin and thiamine in the medium was required for growth. Growing cells fermented maltose mainly to carbon dioxide, hydrogen, ethyl alcohol, and acetic acid. Small amounts of formic and lactic acids, acetoin, and diacetyl were produced. Cells of S. aurantia growing aerobically produced a yellow-orange pigment. Chemical analysis indicated that the pigment was carotenoid in nature, its main component being lycopene or a similar compound. S. aurantia is not closely related to the leptospires, since it lacks both the hemolytic antigen and the hooked ends typical of the latter organisms. Furthermore, the guanine plus cytosine content in the deoxyribonucleic acid of S. aurantia (66.8 moles%) differs drastically from that of leptospires.

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