Isolation and Characterization of Fungi from Lake Magadi of the Kenyan Rift Valley

Odilia Atamba Salano

Abstract


Lake Magadi is the southernmost lake in the Kenya Rift Valley, lying in a catchmentof faulted volcanic rocks, north east of Lake Eyasi. Lake Magadi is a saline, alkalinelake, approximately 100 square kilometers in size that lies in a graben. Soda lakesharbor diverse groups of microorganisms that have developed mechanisms to thrive atdifferent temperature ranges according to their optimal growth requirements. Theobjectives of this study were to isolate, characterize and identify fungi from LakeMagadi, a soda Lake of the Kenyan Rift Valley and then screen the isolates for theproduction of useful metabolites. Samples from the lake were isolated on malt extractagar, potato dextrose agar and Sabourand dextrose agar media at pH 10, 30oC. Thirtyisolates were isolated, characterized using cultural, biochemical and molecularapproaches, and screened for production of extracellular enzymes as well as potentialfor production of bioactive metabolites. The fungi grew at pH ranging from 5 – 10,temperature range of 25 – 35 oC and sodium chloride range of 5- 30 %.All the thirty isolates produced different extracellular enzymes such as amylases,lipases, proteases and esterases. Antimicrobial assays done to determine the isolatesrange of in vitro activity against test organisms; Staphylococcus aureus (NCTC10788), Escherichia coli (NCTC 10418), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC 27853),Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 55732), and fungi; Candida albicans (ATCC 90028)exhibited a range of inhibitory effects. Isolate LM13 produced coloured pigments intothe media.Analysis of partial sequences using Blast showed that about 60% of the isolates wereaffiliated to microorganisms belonging to the genus Penicillium and Aspergillus .7%and 10% belonged to the genus Polyzellus and Fusarium respectively while 7%affiliated to the genus Neurospora and 16% clustered closely with uncultured fungus.The DNA sequences of LM3 showed identity of 95 % similarity with the previouslyknown sequences in the GenBank database. These could represent a novel species oforganisms within the lake’s ecosystem. Isolates LM12 and LM17 showed DNAsequence identity of 89 % and 82% respectively and could represent novel genera oforganisms.

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