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CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea

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Page 1: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

CHAPTER 13Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea

Page 2: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism

 Phylogenetic Overview of the

Archaea

Page 3: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Archaea form four major phyla, the Euryarchaeota, the Crenarchaeota, the Korarchaeota, and the Nanoarchaeota.

Page 4: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Figure 13.1 shows a phylogenetic tree of Archaea.

Page 5: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 6: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Energy Conservation and Autotrophy in Archaea

• With the exception of methanogenesis, bioenergetics and intermediary metabolism in species of Archaea are much the same as those in various species of Bacteria.

Page 7: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Several Archaea are chemoorganotrophic and thus use organic compounds as energy sources for growth. Chemolithotrophy is also well established in the Archaea, with H2 being

a common electron donor.

Page 8: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• The capacity for autotrophy is widespread in the Archaea and occurs by several different pathways. In methanogens, and presumably in most chemolithotrophic hyperthermophiles, CO2 is incorporated via the acetyl-CoA

pathway or some modification thereof.

Page 9: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Phylum Euryarchaeota 

Extremely Halophilic Archaea

Page 10: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Extremely halophilic Archaea require large amounts of NaCl for growth. These organisms accumulate high levels of KCl in their cytoplasm as a compatible solute.

Page 11: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• These salts affect cell wall stability and enzyme activity. The light-mediated proton pump bacteriorhodopsin helps extreme halophiles make ATP (Figure 13.4).

Page 12: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Model for the mechanism of bacteriorhodopsin activityLight near 570 nm converts the protonated retinal bacteriorhodopsin from the trans form (RetT) to the cis form (RetC), along with translocation of a proton to the outer surface of the membrane, thus establishing a proton motive force. ATPase activity is driven by proton motive force.

Chlorophyll pigments also synthesize ATP, a

light driven process

Page 13: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Table 13.1 gives the ionic composition of some highly saline environments.

Page 14: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 15: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Table 13.2 lists the currently recognized species of extremely halophilic Archaea.

Page 16: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 17: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Methane-Producing Archaea: Methanogens

• A large number of Euryarchaeota produce methane (CH4) as an integral part of their

energy metabolism. Such organisms are called methanogens. Methanogenic Archaea are strictly anaerobic prokaryotes.

Page 18: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Habitats of methanogenic Archaea are listed in Table 13.4.

Page 19: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 20: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Table 13.5 gives characteristics of some methanogenic Archaea.

Page 21: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 22: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 23: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Substrates converted to methane by various methanogenic Archaea are listed in Table 13.6. Acetotrophic substrates are those that consume acetate.

Page 24: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 25: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Thermoplasmatales: Thermoplasma, Ferroplasma,

and Picrophilus

Page 26: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Thermoplasma, Ferroplasma, and Picrophilus are extremely acidophilic thermophiles that form their own phylogenetic family of Archaea inhabiting coal refuse piles and highly acidic solfataras.

Page 27: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Cells of Thermoplasma and Ferroplasma lack cell walls and thus resemble the mycoplasmas in this regard.

Page 28: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• To survive the osmotic stresses of life without a cell wall and to withstand the dual environmental extremes of low pH and high temperature, Thermoplasma has evolved a unique cell membrane structure (Figure 13.11).

Page 29: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Structure of the tetraether lipoglycan of Thermoplasms acidophilum – monolayer of lipid rather than bilayer membrane

Page 30: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Hyperthermophilic Euryarchaeota:

Thermococcales and Methanopyrus

Page 31: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• A few euryarchaeotes thrive in thermal environments, and some are hyperthermophiles. All organisms in this group have growth temperature optima above 80°C.

• Thermococcus is a spherical hyperthermophilic euryarchaeote indigenous to anoxic thermal waters in various locations throughout the world.

Page 32: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Methanopyrus is a rod-shaped hyperthermophilic methanogen isolated from sediments near submarine hydrothermal vents and from the walls of "black smoker" hydrothermal vent chimneys.

Page 33: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Methanopyrus is unusual because it contains membrane lipids found in no other known organism.

•In the lipids of Archaea, the glycerol side chains contain phytanyl rather than fatty acids bonded in ether linkage to the glycerol.

Page 34: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• In Methanopyrus, this ether-linked lipid is an unsaturated form of the otherwise saturated dibiphytanyl tetraethers found in other hyperthermophilic Archaea (Figure 13.13).

Page 35: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Methanopyrus produces CH4 from CO2 and H2

Unsaturated phytanyl, Geranylgeraniol produced by Methanopyrus for cell membranes

Page 36: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Hyperthermophilic Euryarchaeota: The

Archaeoglobales

Page 37: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Archaeoglobus was isolated from hot marine sediments near hydrothermal vents. In its metabolism, Archaeoglobus couples the oxidation of H2, lactate, pyruvate, glucose, or

complex organic compounds to the reduction of sulfate to sulfide.

Page 38: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Ferroglobus is related to Archaeoglobus but is not a sulfate-reducing bacterium. Instead, Ferroglobus is an iron-oxidizing chemolithotrophic autotroph, conserving energy from the oxidation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ coupled to the reduction of NO3

– to NO2– plus

NO (see Table 13.8).

Page 39: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 40: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

PART III Phylum Crenarchaeota

 Habitats and Energy Metabolism of Crenarchaeotes

Page 41: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Table 13.7 summarizes the habitats of Crenarchaeota. They include very hot and very cold environments.

Page 42: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 43: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Most hyperthermophilic Archaea have been isolated from geothermally heated soils or waters containing elemental sulfur and sulfides.

•Hyperthermophilic Crenarchaeota inhabit the hottest habitats currently known to support life.

Page 44: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Cold-dwelling crenarchaeotes have been identified from community sampling of ribosomal RNA genes from many nonthermal environments.

Page 45: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Crenarchaeotes have been found in marine waters worldwide and thrive even in frigid waters and sea ice.

Page 46: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Hyperthermophiles from Terrestrial Volcanic Habitats:

Sulfolobales and Thermoproteales

Page 47: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Two phylogenetically related organisms isolated from these environments include Sulfolobus and Acidianus. These genera form the heart of an order called the Sulfolobales (Table 13.9).

Page 48: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 49: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Key genera within the Thermoproteales are Thermoproteus, Thermofilum, and Pyrobaculum.

Page 50: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Hyperthermophiles from Submarine Volcanic Habitats:

Desulfurococcales

Page 51: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Submarine volcanic habitats are homes to the most thermophilic of all known Archaea. These habitats include both shallow-water thermal springs and deep-sea hydrothermal vents.

Page 52: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Pyrodictium and Pyrolobus are examples of prokaryotes whose growth temperature optimum lies above 100ºC. The optimum for Pyrodictium is 105ºC and for Pyrolobus is 106ºC.

Page 53: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Cells of Pyrodictium are irregularly disc-shaped and grow in culture in a mycelium-like layer attached to crystals of elemental sulfur.

Page 54: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Other notable members of the Desulfurococcales include Desulfurococcus and Ignicoccus.

Page 55: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Like Pyrodictium, Desulfurococcus is a strictly anaerobic S0-reducing bacterium, but it differs from Pyrodictium in that it is much less thermophilic, growing optimally at about 85°C. Ignicoccus grows optimally at 90ºC, and its metabolism is H2/S

0 based.

Page 56: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Phylum Nanoarchaeota 

Nanoarchaeum

Page 57: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Nanoarchaeum is a small, parasitic, early-branching member of the Archaea. Its genome is the smallest of all known organisms. Nanoarchaeum lacks genes for all but core molecular processes and thus depends on its host, Ignicoccus, for most of its cellular needs.

Page 58: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Evolution and Life at High Temperatures

 Heat Stability of Biomolecules

Page 59: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Although hyperthermophiles live at very high temperatures, in some cases above the boiling point of water, there are temperature limits beyond which no living organism can survive. This limit is likely 140ºC to 150°C (Figure 13.25).

Page 60: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea
Page 61: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Protein and DNA stability in hyperthermophiles is critical to surviving high temperature. Because most proteins denature at high temperatures, much research has been done to identify the properties of thermostable proteins.

Page 62: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• The solution to protein thermostability turns on the folding of the molecule. Temperature is also a factor, and unique solutions have evolved in hyperthermophiles to keep their DNA intact.

Page 63: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Hyperthermophilic prokaryotes typically produce special classes of chaperonins that function only at the highest growth temperatures.

•In cells of Pyrodictium, for example, the major chaperonin is a protein complex called the thermosome.

Page 64: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• This complex (thermosome) functions to keep the cell's other proteins properly folded and functional at high temperature and can help cells survive even above their maximal growth temperature.

Page 65: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• All hyperthermophiles produce a DNA topoisomerase called reverse DNA gyrase.

•Reverse gyrase introduces positive supercoils into DNA (in contrast to the negative supercoils introduced by DNA gyrase, found in all nonhyperthermophilic prokaryotes).

Page 66: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

Hyperthermophilic Archaea, H2, and Microbial Evolution

Page 67: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Why do so many Archaea seem to inhabit extreme environments?

•Extreme environments of various types existed on early Earth just as they do today, and it is within such environments that life may first have flourished.

Page 68: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• At the time that cellular life evolved nearly 4 billion years ago, it is almost certain that Earth was far hotter than it is today and probably suitable only for hyperthermophiles.

Page 69: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• If life originated on a hot planet Earth, as most evolutionary scenarios predict, then hyperthermophilic Archaea and Bacteria are likely the closest living relatives to early life forms that remain today.

•Therefore the biology of these hyperthermophiles is not only interesting but may offer us a window into the past.

Page 70: CHAPTER 13 Prokaryotic Diversity: The Archaea. PART I Phylogeny and General Metabolism Phylogenetic Overview of the Archaea

• Hydrogen catabolism may have been the first energy-yielding metabolism of cells.