Current Microbiology, Vol.23, No.6, 337-341, 1991
PHYSICOCHEMICAL AND STRUCTURAL STUDIES ON ACINETOBACTER-CALCOACETICUS RAG-1 AND MR-481 - 2 STANDARD STRAINS IN HYDROPHOBICITY TESTS
Acinetobacter calcoaceticus RAG-1 and MR-48 1, two standard strains used in microbial adhesion to hydrocarbons (MATH), were characterized by contact angles, pH-dependent zeta potentials, elemental surface composition by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and molecular composition by infrared spectroscopy (IR). Negatively stained (methylamine tungstate) and ruthenium red-stained cells were studied by transmission electron microscopy to reveal the absence or presence of surface appendages. Despite the fact that A. calcoacetius RAG-1 is known to be extremely hydrophobic in MATH, whereas MR-481 is a completely non-hydrophobic mutant, neither XPS nor IR indicated a significant difference in chemical composition of the cell surfaces. Contact angles with polar liquids, water and formamide, were considerably higher on RAG-1 than on MR-481, in accordance with their relative hydrophobicities as measured by MATH. However, no significant differences in contact angles were observed between the two strains with apolar liquids like diiodomethane, alpha-bromonaphthalene, and hexadecane. Fibrous extensions on RAG-1, observed after ruthenium red staining, were absent on the non-hydrophobic mutant MR-481. Tentatively, these extensions could be held responsible for the hydrophobicity of A. calcoaceticus RAG-1.