Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 18, 2026

Microbacterium lacus

Microbacterium lacus is a bacterium from the genus Microbacterium which has been isolated from sediments from the Shinji lake from the Shimane Prefecture in Japan. Microbacterium lacus has the ability to degrade sulfadiazine.

Last revised
Jun 18, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
195 w
Citations
5
Source
Microbacterium lacus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Bacteria
Kingdom: Bacillati
Phylum: Actinomycetota
Class: Actinomycetes
Order: Micrococcales
Family: Microbacteriaceae
Genus: Microbacterium
Species:
M. lacus
Binomial name
Microbacterium lacus
Kageyama et al. 2008
Type strain
A5E-5212
DSM 18910
JCM 15575
MBIC08279

Microbacterium lacus is a bacterium from the genus Microbacterium which has been isolated from sediments from the Shinji lake from the Shimane Prefecture in Japan.13 Microbacterium lacus has the ability to degrade sulfadiazine.4

References

References

  1. Parte, A.C. "Microbacterium". LPSN.
  2. "Microbacterium lacus Taxon Passport - StrainInfo". www.straininfo.net. Archived from the original on October 20, 2016.
  3. "Details: DSM-18910". www.dsmz.de.
  4. Tappe, W.; Herbst, M.; Hofmann, D.; Koeppchen, S.; Kummer, S.; Thiele, B.; Groeneweg, J. (8 February 2013). "Degradation of Sulfadiazine by Microbacterium lacus Strain SDZm4, Isolated from Lysimeters Previously Manured with Slurry from Sulfadiazine-Medicated Pigs". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 79 (8): 2572–2577. Bibcode:2013ApEnM..79.2572T. doi:10.1128/AEM.03636-12. PMC 3623193. PMID 23396336.
Further reading

Further reading

  • George M., Garrity (2012). Bergey's manual of systematic bacteriology (2nd ed.). New York: Springer Science + Business Media. ISBN 978-0-387-68233-4.
  • Stephan, Sittig (2014). Sorption, Transformation and Transport of Sulfadiazine in a loess and a sandy Soil. Forschungszentrum Jülich. ISBN 978-3-89336-982-9.
External links