>美國(guó)ATCC>ATCC菌種類>L-1
Sphingobium chlorophenolicum拉丁名
(Nohynek et al.) Takeuchi et al.
(ATCC® 53874™)菌株編號(hào)
Permits and Restrictions View Permits Deposited As Flavobacterium sp.
Strain Designations菌株別名 L-1 [DSM 6965]
Application Degrades pentachlorophenol Produces pentachlorophenol hydroxylase PCP hydroxylase
Isolation分離源 Sediment, freshwater Minnesota,
Biosafety Level 生物安全等級(jí)1
Biosafety classification is based on U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines, it is the responsibility of the customer to ensure that their facilities comply with biosafety regulations for their own country.
Product Format提供形式 freeze-dried
Disclosure This material is cited in a US or other Patent and may not be used to infringe the claims.
Depending on the wishes of the Depositor, ATCC may be required to inform the Patent Depositor of the party to which the material was furnished. This material may not have been produced or characterized by ATCC.
Preceptrol® no
Type Strain 模式菌株no
Comments注釋 Redeposit of ATCC 39723 which no longer degrades PCP.
Medium培養(yǎng)基 ATCC® Medium 1687: Flavobacterium medium
Growth Conditions生長(zhǎng)條件
Temperature培養(yǎng)溫度: 30.0℃
Name of Depositor RC Crawford U.S. Patent Number 4,713,340 Disclosure This material is cited in a US or other Patent and may not be used to infringe the claims.
Depending on the wishes of the Depositor, ATCC may be required to inform the Patent Depositor of the party to which the material was furnished. This material may not have been produced or characterized by ATCC.
Isolation分離源 Sediment, freshwater Minnesota,
References參考文獻(xiàn) Brown EJ, et al. Pentachlorophenol degradation: a pure bacterial culture and an epilithic microbial consortium. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 52: 92-97, 1986. PubMed: 3729408
Crawford RL. Biodegradation of pentachlorophenol. US Patent 4,713,340 dated Dec 15 1987 Xun L, et al. Confirmation of oxidative dehalogenation of pentachlorophenol by a Flavobacterium pentachlorophenol hydroxylase. J. Bacteriol. 174: 5745-5747, 1992. PubMed: 1512208
Karlson U, et al. Genetic and serological evidence for the recognition of four pentachlorophenol-degrading bacterial strains as a species of the genus Sphingomonas. Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 18: 539-548, 1995. freshwater sediments, artificial channels