Species of bacterium
Shewanella algae is a rod-shaped Gram-negative marine bacterium .
Description [ edit ]
S. algae cells are rod-shaped and straight. They can grow on Salmonella-Shigella agar and form yellow-orange or brown colonies. They produce the toxin tetrodotoxin and can infect humans.[2]
Shewanella Algae Found in Humans [ edit ]
Shewanella Algae is found naturally in wildlife such as certain marine environments but can also exist as a pathogen in humans where they live in soft tissue and produce hemolytic substance or exotoxins. Humans with Shewanella Algae in their system can be immunocompromised.[3] The ingestion of this algae through raw seafood can cause it to grow in one's soft tissue and develop these neurotoxins which, if left untreated, can cause infections or disease.[4] Among the several dozen strains of Shewanella Algae, it is found that S. alga is the most commonly found strain in human illnesses.[5]
Metabolism [ edit ]
S. algae is a facultative anaerobe with the ability to reduce iron , uranium and plutonium metabolically . When no oxygen is available, it can use metal cations as the terminal electron acceptor in the electron transport chain .
S. algae is of great interest to the United States Department of Energy because of its ability to reduce the amount of radioactive waste in groundwater by making it less soluble . An example would be:
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{\displaystyle {\begin{array}{lcr}C_{6}H_{12}O_{6}+12U^{6+}+6H_{2}O+24e^{-}\longrightarrow &6CO_{2}+12U^{4+}+24H^{+}\\\qquad Water\ Soluble&Water\ Insoluble\end{array}}}
References [ edit ]
^ Parte, A.C. "Shewanella" . LPSN .
^ Nozue, H; Hayashi, T; Hashimoto, Y; Ezaki, T; Hamasaki, K; Ohwada, K; Terawaki, Y (1992). "Isolation and Characterization of Shewanella alga from Human Clinical Specimens and Emendation of the Description of S. Alga Simidu et al., 1990, 335" . International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology . 42 (4): 628–34. doi :10.1099/00207713-42-4-628 . PMID 1390113 .
^ Sumathi, B. G.; Kumarswamy, S. R.; Amritam, Usha; Arjunan, Ravi (2014). "Shewanella algae: First case report of the fast emerging marine pathogen from squamous cell carcinoma patient in India" . South Asian Journal of Cancer . 3 (3): 188–189. doi :10.4103/2278-330X.136819 . ISSN 2278-330X . PMC 4134617 . PMID 25136533 .
^ Tseng, Shu-Ying; Liu, Po-Yu; Lee, Yi-Hsuan; Wu, Zong-Yen; Huang, Chiu-Chen; Cheng, Ching-Chang; Tung, Kwong-Chung (2018-09-27). "The Pathogenicity of Shewanella algae and Ability to Tolerate a Wide Range of Temperatures and Salinities" . The Canadian Journal of Infectious Diseases & Medical Microbiology . 2018 : 1–9. doi :10.1155/2018/6976897 . PMC 6180972 . PMID 30363620 .
^ Khashe, Shideh; Janda, J. Michael (1998-03-01). "Biochemical and Pathogenic Properties ofShewanella alga and Shewanella putrefaciens" . Journal of Clinical Microbiology . 36 (3): 783–787. doi :10.1128/JCM.36.3.783-787.1998 . ISSN 0095-1137 . PMC 104625 . PMID 9508312 .
External links [ edit ]