Fermented milk products (FMPs) have numerous health properties, making them an important part of our nutrient budget. Based on traditions, history and geography, there are different preferences and recipes for FMP preparation in distinct regions of the world and Russia in particular. A number of dairy products, both widely occurring and region-specific, were sampled in the households and local markets of the Caucasus republics, Buryatia, Altai, and the Far East and European regions of Russia. The examined FMPs were produced from cow, camel, mare’s or mixed milk, in the traditional way, without adding commercial starter cultures. Lactate and acetate were the major volatile fatty acids (VFA) of the studied FMPs, while succinate, formate, propionate and n-butyrate were present in lower concentrations. Bacterial communities analyzed by 16S rRNA gene V4 fragment amplicon sequencing showed that Firmicutes (Lactococcus, Lactobacillus, Streptococcus, Lentilactobacillus and Leuconostoc) was the predominant phylum in all analyzed FMPs, followed by Proteobacteria (Acetobacter, Klebsiella, Pseudomonas and Citrobacter). Lactobacillus (mainly in beverages) or Lactococcus (mainly in creamy and solid products) were the most abundant community-forming genera in FMPs where raw milk was used and fermentation took place at (or below) room temperature. In turn, representatives of Streptococcus genus dominated the FMPs made from melted or pasteurized milk and fermented at elevated temperatures (such as ryazhenka, cottage cheese and matsoni-like products). It was revealed that the microbial diversity of koumiss, shubat, ryazhenka, matsoni-like products, chegen, sour cream and bryndza varied slightly within each type and correlated well with the same products from other regions and countries. On the other hand, the microbiomes of kefir, prostokvasha, ayran, cottage cheese and suluguni-like cheese were more variable and were shaped by the influence of particular factors linked with regional differences and traditions expressed in specificities in the production process. The microbial diversity of aarts, khurunga, khuruud, tan, ayran and suluguni-like cheese was studied here, to our knowledge, for the first time. The results of this study emphasize the overall similarity of the microbial communities of various FMPs on the one hand, and specificities of regional products on the other. The latter are of particular value in the age of globalization when people have begun searching for new and unusual products and properties. Speaking more specifically, these novel products, with their characteristic communities, might be used for the development of novel microbial associations (i.e., starters) to produce novel products with improved or unique properties.
Biogenic transformation of Fe minerals, associated with extracellular electron transfer (EET), allows microorganisms to exploit high-potential refractory electron acceptors for energy generation. EET-capable thermophiles are dominated by hyperthermophilic archaea and Gram-positive bacteria. Information on their EET pathways is sparse. Here, we describe EET channels in the thermophilic Gram-positive bacterium Carboxydothermus ferrireducens that drive exoelectrogenesis and rapid conversion of amorphous mineral ferrihydrite to large magnetite crystals. Microscopic studies indicated biocontrolled formation of unusual formicary-like ultrastructure of the magnetite crystals and revealed active colonization of anodes in bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) by C. ferrireducens. The internal structure of micron-scale biogenic magnetite crystals is reported for the first time. Genome analysis and expression profiling revealed three constitutive c-type multiheme cytochromes involved in electron exchange with ferrihydrite or an anode, sharing insignificant homology with previously described EET-related cytochromes thus representing novel determinants of EET. Our studies identify these cytochromes as extracellular and reveal potentially novel mechanisms of cell-to-mineral interactions in thermal environments.
Mössbauer spectroscopy, nuclear forward scattering, and Raman spectroscopy were applied to study redox transformations of the synthesized mixed-valence (III/V) antimony oxide. The transformations were induced by a culture of a hyperthermophilic archaeon of the genus Pyrobaculum. The applied methods allowed us to reveal the minor decrease of ca. 11.0 ± 1.2% of the antimony(V) content of the mixed-valence oxide with the concomitant increase of antimony(III). The method sensitivities for the quantitative assessment of the Sb(III/V) ratio have been considered.
ВВЕДЕНИЕАрхипелаг Шпицберген -уникальный регион Арктики, где фиксируются быстрые процессы, связанные с потеплением климата. Так, согласно метеорологическим данным, в поселении Лонгйир среднегодовая температура воздуха в течение ХХ в. повысилась примерно с -9 до -4 °С [Humlum et al., 2003]. Площадь ледников в окрестностях Лонгйира и Баренцбурга уменьшилась примерно в 2 раза с 1936 по 2017 г. [Чернов, Муравьев, 2018]. Вечная мерзлота Шпицбергенанаиболее теплая в высоких широтах из-за отепляющего влияния течений и воздушных масс, переносимых из Атлантики Западным Шпицбергенским течением. В 2016 г. в рамках создания криосферного полигона Российского научного центра в районе рудника Баренцбург на восточном берегу зал. Гренфьорд были пробурены скважины для изучения структурных особенностей вечной мерзлоты и мониторинга УДК 577+579+550.72 PACS 87.23.−n БАКТЕРИАЛЬНЫЕ СООБЩЕСТВА МЕРЗЛЫХ ЧЕТВЕРТИЧНЫХ ПОРОД МОРСКОГО ГЕНЕЗИСА НА ПОБЕРЕЖЬЕ о. ЗАПАДНЫЙ ШПИЦБЕРГЕН
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