Pyrobaculum

Pyrobaculum
Scientific classification
Domain: Archaea
Kingdom: Crenarchaeota
Phylum: Crenarchaeota
Class: Thermoprotei
Order: Thermoproteales
Family: Thermoproteaceae
Genus: Pyrobaculum
Huber, Kristjansson & Stetter, 1988
Species

Pyrobaculum is a genus of the Thermoproteaceae.

Description and significance

As its Latin name Pyrobaculum (the "fire stick") suggests, the archaeon is rod-shaped and isolated from locations with high temperatures. It is Gram-negative and its cells are surrounded by an S-layer of protein subunits.

P. aerophilum is a hyperthermophilic and metabolically versatile organism. Different from other hyperthermophiles, it can live in the presence of oxygen and grows efficiently in microaerobic conditions.


Genome structure

The first Pyrobaculum species to be sequenced was P. aerophilum. Its circular genome sequence is 2,222,430 Bp in length and contains 2605 protein-encoding sequences (CDS).

Cell structure and metabolism

Under anaerobic conditions, the archaeon reduces nitrate to molecular nitrogen via the denitrification pathway. Most species grow either chemolithoautotrophically by sulfur reduction or organotrophically by sulfur respiration or by fermentation. Cells are rod-shaped with almost rectangular ends and are about 1.58 * 0.50.6 µm. Pyrobaculum is motile because of peritrichous or bipolar polytrichous flagellation, and its colonies are round and grey to greenish black. The species are either faculatively aerobic or strictly anaerobic. The growth was observed on yeast extract, peptone, extract of meat, but not on galactose, glucose, maltose, starch glycogen, ethanol, methanol, formamide, formate, malate, propionate, lactate, acetate, and casamino acids.

The first of the Pyrobaculum species to be genetically sequenced, P. aerophilum (rod-shaped, 38 * 0.6 µm), has a rare characteristic for an archaeon because it is capable of aerobic respiration (aerophilum = "air-loving"). This is evident from the fact that the archaeon grew only in the presence of oxygen when nitrate was absent. It produces colonies that are round and greyish yellow. It utilizes both organic (maximal cell densities were observed with complex organics such as yeast extract, meat extract, tryptone, and peptone as substrates) and inorganic compounds during aerobic and anaerobic respiration. Also, use of elemental sulphur for growth was observed. Further, P. aerophilum grows between 75 and 104 °C with an optimal growth temperature at 100 °C.

Ecology

To this date, the strains of Pyrobaculum have been isolated from neutral to slightly alkaline boiling solfataric waters and shallow marine hydrothermal systems. P. aerophilum was isolated from a boiling marine water hole at Maronti Beach, Ischia, Italy. Further studies show that P. aerophilum grows under strictly anaerobic conditions with nitrate as the electron acceptor.[1]

References

  1. See the NCBI webpage on Pyrobaculum. Data extracted from the "NCBI taxonomy resources". National Center for Biotechnology Information. Retrieved 2007-03-19.

See also

Pyrobaculum asR3 small RNA

Further reading

Scientific journals

  • Burggraf S; Huber H; Stetter KO (1997). "Reclassification of the crenarchael orders and families in accordance with 16S rRNA sequence data". Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 47 (3): 657&ndash, 660. doi:10.1099/00207713-47-3-657. PMID 9226896.
  • Huber R; Kristjansson JK; Stetter KO (1987). "Pyrobaculum gen. nov., a new genus of neutrophilic, rod-shaped archaebacteria from continental solfataras growing optimally at 100°C". Arch. Microbiol. 149 (2): 95&ndash, 101. doi:10.1007/BF00425072.
  • Zillig W; Stetter KO; Schafer W; Janekovic D; et al. (1981). "Thermoproteales: a novel type of extremely thermoacidophilic anaerobic archaebacteria isolated from Icelandic solfataras". Zentralbl. Mikrobiol. Parasitenkd. Infektionskr. Hyg. Abt. 1 Orig. C2: 205&ndash, 227.
  • Lai, Lien B.; Chan, Patricia P.; Cozen, Aaron E.; Bernick, David L.; et al. (28 Dec 2010). "Discovery of a minimal form of RNase P in Pyrobaculum". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (52): 22493–22498. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10722493L. doi:10.1073/pnas.1013969107. PMC 3012483. PMID 21135215.
  • Wells, Stephen A.; Crennell, Susan J.; Danson, Michael J. (Oct 2014). "Structures of mesophilic and extremophilic citrate synthases reveal rigidity and flexibility for function". Proteins: Structure, Function, and Bioinformatics. 82 (10): 2657–70. doi:10.1002/prot.24630.

Scientific databases


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