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. 1987 Mar;33(3):267-72.
doi: 10.1139/m87-045.

Electron microscopic study of the methylcellulose-mediated detachment of cellulolytic rumen bacteria from cellulose fibers

Electron microscopic study of the methylcellulose-mediated detachment of cellulolytic rumen bacteria from cellulose fibers

H Kudo et al. Can J Microbiol. 1987 Mar.

Abstract

The presence of methylcellulose prevents the attachment of cellulolytic rumen bacteria to cellulose fibers. The addition of methylcellulose to pure cultures of these organisms in which the cells are already adherent to cellulose causes their detachment from this insoluble substrate and the inhibition of their growth. Methylcellulose is not used as a carbon source by these organisms and has no effect on their growth when glucose and cellobiose are the carbon sources. Attached cells of Bacteroides succinogenes orient themselves in the plane of the individual cellulose fibers and their methylcellulose-induced detachment, which is complete (almost 100%), leaves grooves where the cellulose has been digested. Attached cells of Ruminococcus albus colonize the cellulose in a looser and less regular pattern and their almost complete methylcellulose-induced detachment leaves less regular pits in the cellulose surface. On the other hand, attached cells of Ruminococcus flavefaciens colonize the cellulose surface in a random orientation by means of a discernible exopolysaccharide network, and their less complete methylcellulose-induced detachment leaves no residual impressions on the cellulose surface. These data support the suggestion that bacterial attachment is necessary for the digestion of highly ordered crystalline cellulose, and that cellulolytic species differ in the nature of their attachment to this insoluble substrate and in the nature of their enzymatic attack. Methylcellulose is an effective agent for detaching major rumen cellulolytic bacteria from their cellulosic substrate.

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