Cyanobacteria in hypersaline environments: biodiversity and physiological properties

被引:60
|
作者
Oren, Aharon [1 ]
机构
[1] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Alexander Silberman Inst Life Sci, Dept Plant & Environm Sci, IL-91904 Jerusalem, Israel
关键词
Cyanobacteria; Hypersaline salterns; Osmotic adaptation; Anoxygenic photosynthesis; SALINS-DE-GIRAUD; FACULTATIVE ANOXYGENIC PHOTOSYNTHESIS; MICROBIAL MAT COMMUNITIES; MICROCOLEUS-CHTHONOPLASTES; OSCILLATORIA-LIMNETICA; GYPSUM CRUST; SP-NOV; UNICELLULAR CYANOBACTERIA; DACTYLOCOCCOPSIS-SALINA; BENTHIC CYANOBACTERIA;
D O I
10.1007/s10531-015-0882-z
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Within the cyanobacterial world there are many species adapted to life in hypersaline environments. Some can even grow at salt concentrations approaching NaCl saturation. Halophilic cyanobacteria often form dense mats in salt lakes, and on the bottom of solar saltern ponds, hypersaline lagoons, and saline sulfur springs, and they may be found in evaporite crusts of gypsum and halite. A wide range of species were reported to live at high salinities. These include unicellular types (Aphanothece halophytica and similar morphotypes described as Euhalothece and Halothece), as well as non-heterocystous filamentous species (Coleofasciculus chthonoplastes, species of Phormidium, Halospirulina tapeticola, Halomicronema excentricum, and others). Cyanobacterial diversity in high-salt environments has been explored using both classic, morphology-based taxonomy and molecular, small subunit rRNA sequence-based techniques. This paper reviews the diversity of the cyanobacterial communities in hypersaline environments worldwide, as well as the physiological adaptations that enable these cyanobacteria to grow at high salt concentrations. To withstand the high osmotic pressure of their surrounding medium, halophilic cyanobacteria accumulate organic solutes: glycine betaine is the preferred solute in the most salt-tolerant types; Coleofasciculus produces the heteroside glucosylglycerol, and the less salt-tolerant cyanobacteria generally accumulate the disaccharides sucrose and trehalose under salt stress. Some cyanobacteria growing in benthic mats in hypersaline environments are adapted to life under anoxic conditions and they can use sulfide as an alternative electron donor in an anoxygenic type of photosynthesis through a process which involves photosystem I only.
引用
收藏
页码:781 / 798
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Halocins: Protein antibiotics from hypersaline environments
    Shand, RF
    Price, LB
    O'Connor, EM
    MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY OF HYPERSALINE ENVIRONMENTS, 1998, : 295 - 306
  • [42] HYPERSALINE ENVIRONMENTS - MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOGEOCHEMISTRY - JAVOR,B
    GRANT, WD
    SCIENCE, 1989, 246 (4937) : 1645 - 1646
  • [43] ANAEROBIC-BACTERIA FROM HYPERSALINE ENVIRONMENTS
    OLLIVIER, B
    CAUMETTE, P
    GARCIA, JL
    MAH, RA
    MICROBIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 1994, 58 (01) : 27 - 38
  • [44] TRACKING GLOBAL CHANGES IN ANTARCTIC CYANOBACTERIA BIODIVERSITY
    Micheli, Carla
    Cianchi, Rossella
    Paperi, Raffaella
    Pushraraj, Benjamin
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, 2011, 46 : 171 - 171
  • [45] Biodiversity of terrestrial cyanobacteria of the South Ural region
    Gaysina, Lira A.
    Bohunicka, Marketa
    Hazukova, Vaclava
    Johansen, Jeffrey R.
    CRYPTOGAMIE ALGOLOGIE, 2018, 39 (02) : 167 - 198
  • [46] HIDDEN CYANOBACTERIA BIODIVERSITY IN THE CANARIAN LAUREL FOREST
    Rancel-Rodriguez, Nereida M.
    Sausen, Nicole
    Melkonian, Barbara
    Martel-Quintana, Antera
    Melkonian, Michael
    PHYCOLOGIA, 2021, 60 : 62 - 62
  • [47] Cyanobacteria from extreme acidic environments
    Dominic, TK
    Madhusoodanan, PV
    CURRENT SCIENCE, 1999, 77 (08): : 1021 - 1023
  • [48] A physiological model for the marine cyanobacteria, Trichodesmium
    Robson, Barbara J.
    Baird, Mark
    Wild-Allen, Karen
    20TH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MODELLING AND SIMULATION (MODSIM2013), 2013, : 1652 - 1658
  • [49] Physiological Significance of NAD Kinases in Cyanobacteria
    Ishikawa, Yuuma
    Kawai-Yamada, Maki
    FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 2019, 10
  • [50] Cyanobacteria: Extreme Environments and Toxic Metabolites
    Pittino, Francesca
    Oliveira, Juliana
    Torres, Mariana De Almeida
    Fink, Sabine
    Janssen, Elisabeth M. L.
    Scheidegger, Christoph
    CHIMIA, 2022, 76 (11) : 967 - 969