Authors
Masayuki Takizawa, Rita R Colwell, Russell T Hill
Publication date
1993/4
Journal
Applied and environmental microbiology
Volume
59
Issue
4
Pages
997-1002
Description
Chesapeake Bay was investigated as a source of actinomycetes to screen for production of novel bioactive compounds. The presence of relatively large populations of actinoplanetes (chemotype II/D actinomycetes) in Chesapeake Bay sediment samples indicates that it is an eminently suitable ecosystem from which to isolate actinomycetes for screening programs. Actinomycetes were isolated from sediment samples collected in Chesapeake Bay with an isolation medium containing nalidixic acid, which proved to be more effective than heat pretreatment of samples. Actinomycete counts ranged from a high of 1.4 × 105 to a low of 1.8 × 102 CFU/ml of sediment. Actinomycetes constituted 0.15 to 8.63% of the culturable microbial community. The majority of isolates from the eight stations studied were actinoplanetes (i.e., chemotype II/D), and 249 of these isolates were obtained in a total of 298 actinomycete isolates …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Takizawa, RR Colwell, RT Hill - Applied and environmental microbiology, 1993