4B. Microbial Diversity - Archaea Flashcards
Eukarchaeota (phylum)
extreme halophiles
Haloarchaea (genus) - phylum, old name, example, location, pH
- PHYLUM: euryarchaeota
- OLD: halobacteria
ex) halobacterium salinarum - needs high salt concentration
- 9% of NaCl for growth (can’t even grow in mannitol salt cuz it’s only 7.5%)
- LOCATION: solar salt evaporation ponds and salt lakes
- pH: alkaliphiles because these ponds and lakes are high in alkaline
adaptations for haloarchaea (genus)
- needed for highly ionic environments
- usually achieved by accumulation or synthesis of compatible solutes
- pumps large amounts of K+ into the cell from the environment
- intracellular K+ concentration exceeds extracellular Na+ concentration
- water flows into the cell in hypersaline environments
Energy system in haloarchaea (genus)
- light driven synthesis of ATP without the use of chlorophylls
they use a pigment instead (bacteriorhodopsin): - integral membrane protein
- absorbs light energy and pumps protons across the membrane to make a PMF
- PMF used to generate ATP
- do not fix CO2 therefore photoheterotrophy (gets energy from light and pre-existing carbon)
Methanogenic archaea (genus) - phylum, oxygen, energy, defining features
- PHYLUM: euryarchaeota
- ENERGY: chemolithoautotrops
- OXYGEN: strict anaerobes (cows gut, sewage sludge)
- only microbes capable of significant methane production
- produce the bulk CH4 in the atmosphere - GHG
Cell wall in methanogenic archaea (genus)
- pseudomurein
- methanobacterium - only they have this
- most other types of methanogens have S-layer made of protein or glycoprotein as their cell wall
thaumarchaeota (genus) - defining features, example, oxygen, energy, location
- accomplishes nitrification
- converts NH3 into NO2 for energy
- uses CO2 for carbon
ex) nitrosopumilus maritimus
OXYGEN: aerobic
ENERGY: ammonia oxidizing chemolithoautotroph (gets energy from inorganic chemicals)
LOCATION: abundant in open ocean water
nanoarchaeota (phylum) - example, defining features
nanoarchaeum equitans
- smallest cellular organism
- obligate parasite of the crenarchaeote - ignicoccus
- contains one of the smallest genomes known - lacks genes for all but core molecular processes
- depends upon host for most of it’s cellular needs
korarchaeota (phylum): example, oxygen, energy, location, defining features
Korarchaeum cryptofilum
- OXYGEN: obligately anaerobic
- ENERGY: chemoorganotroph
- LOCATION: - depends on other members of hot springs community
- still can’t be grown in pure culture
- hyperthermophile
- cells are long, thin filaments
- lack many core genes
crenarchaeota (phylum): energy, defining features
ENERGY: chemoorganotrophs or chemolithotrophs - most use sulfur in their metabolism
- most are hyperthermophiles (hot springs, deep ocean vents
- other representatives are found in extremely cold environments
crenarchaeota (phylum): example, oxygen, energy, defining features
sulfolobus acidocaldarius grows in sulfur-rich acidic hot springs
- hyperthermophile and acidophile
- OXYGEN: aerobic
- ENERGY: chemolithotroph (inorganic chemicals for energy) that oxidizes reduces sulfur or iron
asgard superphylum of archaea
- only known from sequence of metagenomes
- version of genes previously thought to be euk-specific
- first time cultured in a lab in 2020
- 10 years to isolate and grow
- syntrophic growth: will only grow in the presence of another bacteria
- amorphus
- leads to hypothetical eukaryogenesis theory