Abstract:
Hot springs are aquatic environments with high temperatures. They harbor diverse
groups of micro-organisms that have developed mechanisms to thrive at wide
temperature ranges, according to their optimal growth requirements. Research on these
microbes is motivated by their great biotechnological potential such as production of
useful secondary metabolites and enzymes with industrial application. The objectives
of this research were to determine the physico-chemical characteristics of the hot
springs in Lake Bogoria, isolate, characterize and identify alkalithermophilies from the
hot springs of Lake Bogoria and then screen the isolates for the production of useful
metabolites. Samples were collected from the hot springs of Lake Bogoria. The
physico-chemical characteristics were established in the field. Enrichment and
isolation was done on modified Horikoshi media, at pH 9, and 55ºC. Isolates were
identified using morphological, physiological, biochemical and molecular
characterization. Molecular analysis of Polymerase Chain Reaction amplicons with
16S rDNA region, were amplified using primers specific for bacteria. Restriction
Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP), sequencing and phylogenetic analysis were
done, with Hae III and Msp I and a Phylogenetic tree was drawn. The physicochemical
parameters established were temperature 90oC and pH 8. Thirty six isolates
were obtained and they grew at varied NaCl concentration (2-20%), temperatures
(24oC-65oC) and pH (5.7-9). They were non-fermentative, xylanolytic, noncellulolytic,
amylolytic, and some lipolytic and proteolytic. Best enzyme activity was
at 55oC. Molecular analysis of Polymerase Chain Reaction amplicons with 16S rDNA
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region, resulted in only three RFLP patterns with Hae III and Msp I suggesting that
the community structure was homogeneous in the sampling areas. Phylogenetic
analysis showed that all the isolates belonged to the domain bacteria, phylum
firmicutes, class Bacilli, order Bacillates, family Bacillaceae and genus Bacillus. The
hot springs of Lake Bogoria, harbor alkalithermophiles which have the potential to
produce useful secondary metabolites such as alkali stable enzymes that can form the
basis of bioeconomy if fully exploited. Combining morphological, physiological and
molecular approaches and by the use of the modified Horikoshi media, novel isolates
related to B. halodurans were isolated from the hot springs of Lake Bogoria. Based on
the results, the isolates recovered are thermotolerant, alkalitolerant and halotolerant.
The isolates also have the potential to produce useful secondary metabolites like
enzymes