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Extremophiles
Life on edge
Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
Extremophiles
Images from NASA, http://pds.jpl.nasa.gov/planets/
Extraterrestrial microbial
life-does it exist?
Aims
 What are Extremophiles- an introduction
 Strategies for growth & survival
 Biotechnology
Introduction to Extremophiles
 What are Extremophiles
 Live where nothing else can
 How do they survive?
 Extremozymes (more details later)
 Why are they are interesting?
 Life on other planets
 Life at boiling temperatures
 Applications are interesting
Extremophile
 History
 First suspected in 1950’s
 Extensively studied since 1970’s
 Temperature extremes
 Boiling or freezing, 1000C to -10C
 Chemical extremes
 Vinegar or ammonia (<5 pH or >9
pH)
 Highly saline, up to x10 sea water
 How we sterilize & preserve foods
today
Extreme Temperatures
 Thermophiles - High temperature
 Thermal vents and hot springs
 Psychrophiles - Low temperature
 Arctic and Antarctic
 1/2 of earth’s surface is oceans between
1-40C
 Deep sea –10C to 40C
 Most rely on photosynthesis
Thermophiles
Hydrothermal Vents- Black
smokers at 350 oC
Obsidian Pool,
Yellowstone National Park
Psychrophiles
Chemical Extremes
 Acidophiles - Acidic
 Again some thermal vents & hot springs
 Alkaliphiles - Alkaline
 Soda lakes in Africa and Western U.S.
 Halophiles - Highly saline
 Natural salt lakes and manmade pools
 Sometimes occurs with extreme
alkalinity
Acidophiles
pH 0-1 of waters
at Iron Mountain
Alkaliphiles
Mono Lake- alkaline
soda lake, pH 9 &
salinity 8%
Halophiles
Dead Sea
Great Salt Lake coastal
splash zones
Solar salterns Owens Lake
Survival
 Temperature extremes
 Every part of microbe must function at
extreme
 “Tough” enzymes for Thermophiles
 “Efficient” enzymes for Psychrophiles
 Many enzymes from these microbes are
interesting
Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
Survival
 Chemical extremes
 Interior of cell is “normal”
 Exterior protects the cell
 Acidophiles and Alkaliphiles sometimes
excrete protective substances and
enzymes
 Acidophiles often lack cell wall
 Some moderate halophiles have high concs
of a solute inside to avoid “pickling”
What are enzymes?
 Enzymes - a protein that catalyses (speeds
up) chemical reactions without being changed
What are enzymes?
 Enzymes are specific
 Lock and key analogy
Enzyme
Substrate A
Product B
Product C
What are enzymes?
 Activation energy
 Enzymes allow reactions with lower energy
Energy
Time
Without Enzyme
With Enzyme
What are enzymes?
 Enzymes are just a protein
 They can be destroyed by
 Heat, acid, base
 They can be inhibited by
 Cold, salt
 Heat an egg white or add vinegar to milk
 Protein is a major component of both-
de-natures (breaking the bonds that gives
a 3D shape)
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akhs3
wcSDGA
Practical Applications
 Extremozymes
 Enzyme from Extremophile
 Industry & Medicine
 What if you want an enzyme to work
 In a hot factory?
 Tank of cold solution?
 Acidic pond?
 Sewage (ammonia)?
 Highly saline solution?
One solution
 Pay a genetic engineer to design a “super”
enzymes...
 Heat resistant enzymes
 Survive low temperatures
 Able to resist acid, alkali and/or salt
 This could take years and lots of money
Extremophiles got there first
 Nature has already given us the solutions
to these problems
 Extremophiles have the enzymes that
work in extreme conditions
Endolithic algae from Antarctica; Hot springs in Yellowstone National P
© 1998 Reston Communications, www.reston.com/astro/extreme.html
Thermophiles
Many industrial processes involve high heat
 450C (113F) is a problem for most enzymes
 First Extremophile found in 1972
Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
PCR - Polymerase
Chain Reaction
 Allows amplification of small sample of DNA
using high temperature process
 Technique is about 10 years old
 DNA fingerprints - samples from crime scene
 Genetic Screening - swab from the mouth
 Medical Diagnosis - a few virus particles
from blood
 Thermus aquaticus or Taq
Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
Psychrophiles
 Efficient enzymes to work in the cold
 Enzymes to work on foods that need to be
refrigerated
 Perfumes - most don’t tolerate high
temperatures
 Cold-wash detergents
Algal mats on an Antarctic lake bottom,
© 1998 Reston Communications, www.reston.com/astro/extreme.html
Acidophiles
 Enzymes used to increase
efficiency of animal feeds
 enzymes help animals
extract nutrients from feed
 more efficient and less
expensive
Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
Alkaliphiles
 “Stonewashed” pants
 Alkaliphilic enzymes soften fabric and
release some of the dyes, giving worn look &
feel
 Detergents
 Enzymes dissolve proteins or fats
 Detergents do not inhibit alkaliphilic enzymes
What is a halophile?
 Halophile = “salt loving; can grow in higher salt
concentrations
 Based on optimal saline environments halophilic
organisms can be grouped into three categories:
 extreme halophiles,
 moderate halophiles, and
 slightly halophilic or halotolerant organisms
 Some extreme halophiles can live in solutions of
25 % salt; seawater = 2% salt
Diversity of Halophilic Organisms
 Halophiles are a broad group & can be
found in all three domains of life.
 Found in salt marshes, subterranean salt
deposits, dry soils, salted meats,
hypersaline seas, and salt evaporation
ponds.
Unusual Habitats
 A Pseudomonas species lives on a desert
plant in the Negev Desert- the plant
leaves secretes salt through salt glands.
 A Bacillus species is found in the nasal
cavities of desert iguanas- iguanas nasal
cavities have salt glands which secrete
KCl brine during osmotic stress.
Osmoregulation
 Halophiles maintain an internal osmotic
potential that equals their external
environment.
 Osmosis is the process in which water
moves from an area of high concentration
to an area of low concentration.
Osmoregulation
 In order for cells to maintain their water
they must have an osmotic potential equal to
their external environment.
Osmoregulation
 Halophiles have adapted to life at high
salinity in many different ways.
 Structural modification of external cell
walls- posses negatively charged proteins
on the outside which bind to positively
charged sodium ions in their external
environments & stabilizes the cell wall
break down.
“Salt-in” Strategy
 Cells can have internal concentrations that
are osmotically equivalent to their external
environment.
 This “salt-in” strategy is primarily used by
aerobic, extremely halophilic archaea and
anaerobic bacteria.
 They maintain osmotically equivalent
internal concentrations by accumulating
high concentrations of potassium chloride.
“Salt-in” Strategy
 Potassium ions enter the cell passively via
a uniporter. Sodium ions are pumped out.
Chloride enters the cell against the
membrane potential via cotransport with
sodium ions.
 For every three molecules of potassium
chloride accumulated, two ATP are
hydrolyzed making this strategy more
energy efficient than the “compatible
solute” strategy.
“Salt-in” Strategy
 To use this strategy all enzymes and
structural cell components must be
adapted to high salt concentrations to
ensure proper cell function.
Halobacterium: an extreme halophile
 Halobacterium are members of domain
archaea.
 Widely researched for their extreme
halophilism and unique structure.
 Require salt concentrations between 15% to
saturation to live.
 Use the “salt-in” strategy.
 Produce ATP by respiration or by
bacteriorhodopsin.
Halobacterium
 May also have halorhodopsin that pumps
chloride into the cell instead of pumping
protons out.
 The Red Sea was named after
halobacterium that turns the water red
during massive blooms.
Facts
 The term “red herring” comes from the
foul smell of salted meats that were
spoiled by halobacterium.
 There have been considerable problems
with halophiles colonizing leather during
the salt curing process.
Applications
 The extraction of carotene from carotene
rich halobacteria and halophilic algae that
can then be used as food additives or as
food-coloring agents.
 The use of halophilic organisms in the
fermentation of soy sauce and Thai fish
sauce.
Applications
 Other possible applications being explored:
 Increasing crude oil extraction (MEOR)
 Genetically engineering halophilic enzymes
encoding DNA into crops to allow for salt
tolerance
 Treatment of waste water (petroleum)
Conclusions
 Halophiles are salt tolerant organisms.
 They are widespread and found in all three
domains.
 The “salt-in” strategy uses less energy but
requires intracellular adaptations. Only a
few prokaryotes use it.
 All other halophiles use the “compatible
solute” strategy that is energy expensive but
does not require special adaptations.

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Extremophiles .ppt

  • 1. Extremophiles Life on edge Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
  • 2. Extremophiles Images from NASA, http://pds.jpl.nasa.gov/planets/ Extraterrestrial microbial life-does it exist?
  • 3. Aims  What are Extremophiles- an introduction  Strategies for growth & survival  Biotechnology
  • 4. Introduction to Extremophiles  What are Extremophiles  Live where nothing else can  How do they survive?  Extremozymes (more details later)  Why are they are interesting?  Life on other planets  Life at boiling temperatures  Applications are interesting
  • 5. Extremophile  History  First suspected in 1950’s  Extensively studied since 1970’s  Temperature extremes  Boiling or freezing, 1000C to -10C  Chemical extremes  Vinegar or ammonia (<5 pH or >9 pH)  Highly saline, up to x10 sea water  How we sterilize & preserve foods today
  • 6. Extreme Temperatures  Thermophiles - High temperature  Thermal vents and hot springs  Psychrophiles - Low temperature  Arctic and Antarctic  1/2 of earth’s surface is oceans between 1-40C  Deep sea –10C to 40C  Most rely on photosynthesis
  • 7. Thermophiles Hydrothermal Vents- Black smokers at 350 oC Obsidian Pool, Yellowstone National Park
  • 9. Chemical Extremes  Acidophiles - Acidic  Again some thermal vents & hot springs  Alkaliphiles - Alkaline  Soda lakes in Africa and Western U.S.  Halophiles - Highly saline  Natural salt lakes and manmade pools  Sometimes occurs with extreme alkalinity
  • 10. Acidophiles pH 0-1 of waters at Iron Mountain
  • 11. Alkaliphiles Mono Lake- alkaline soda lake, pH 9 & salinity 8%
  • 12. Halophiles Dead Sea Great Salt Lake coastal splash zones Solar salterns Owens Lake
  • 13. Survival  Temperature extremes  Every part of microbe must function at extreme  “Tough” enzymes for Thermophiles  “Efficient” enzymes for Psychrophiles  Many enzymes from these microbes are interesting Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
  • 14. Survival  Chemical extremes  Interior of cell is “normal”  Exterior protects the cell  Acidophiles and Alkaliphiles sometimes excrete protective substances and enzymes  Acidophiles often lack cell wall  Some moderate halophiles have high concs of a solute inside to avoid “pickling”
  • 15. What are enzymes?  Enzymes - a protein that catalyses (speeds up) chemical reactions without being changed
  • 16. What are enzymes?  Enzymes are specific  Lock and key analogy Enzyme Substrate A Product B Product C
  • 17. What are enzymes?  Activation energy  Enzymes allow reactions with lower energy Energy Time Without Enzyme With Enzyme
  • 18. What are enzymes?  Enzymes are just a protein  They can be destroyed by  Heat, acid, base  They can be inhibited by  Cold, salt  Heat an egg white or add vinegar to milk  Protein is a major component of both- de-natures (breaking the bonds that gives a 3D shape)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=akhs3 wcSDGA
  • 19. Practical Applications  Extremozymes  Enzyme from Extremophile  Industry & Medicine  What if you want an enzyme to work  In a hot factory?  Tank of cold solution?  Acidic pond?  Sewage (ammonia)?  Highly saline solution?
  • 20. One solution  Pay a genetic engineer to design a “super” enzymes...  Heat resistant enzymes  Survive low temperatures  Able to resist acid, alkali and/or salt  This could take years and lots of money
  • 21. Extremophiles got there first  Nature has already given us the solutions to these problems  Extremophiles have the enzymes that work in extreme conditions Endolithic algae from Antarctica; Hot springs in Yellowstone National P © 1998 Reston Communications, www.reston.com/astro/extreme.html
  • 22. Thermophiles Many industrial processes involve high heat  450C (113F) is a problem for most enzymes  First Extremophile found in 1972 Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
  • 23. PCR - Polymerase Chain Reaction  Allows amplification of small sample of DNA using high temperature process  Technique is about 10 years old  DNA fingerprints - samples from crime scene  Genetic Screening - swab from the mouth  Medical Diagnosis - a few virus particles from blood  Thermus aquaticus or Taq Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
  • 24. Psychrophiles  Efficient enzymes to work in the cold  Enzymes to work on foods that need to be refrigerated  Perfumes - most don’t tolerate high temperatures  Cold-wash detergents Algal mats on an Antarctic lake bottom, © 1998 Reston Communications, www.reston.com/astro/extreme.html
  • 25. Acidophiles  Enzymes used to increase efficiency of animal feeds  enzymes help animals extract nutrients from feed  more efficient and less expensive Life at High Temperatures, Thomas M. Brock
  • 26. Alkaliphiles  “Stonewashed” pants  Alkaliphilic enzymes soften fabric and release some of the dyes, giving worn look & feel  Detergents  Enzymes dissolve proteins or fats  Detergents do not inhibit alkaliphilic enzymes
  • 27. What is a halophile?  Halophile = “salt loving; can grow in higher salt concentrations  Based on optimal saline environments halophilic organisms can be grouped into three categories:  extreme halophiles,  moderate halophiles, and  slightly halophilic or halotolerant organisms  Some extreme halophiles can live in solutions of 25 % salt; seawater = 2% salt
  • 28. Diversity of Halophilic Organisms  Halophiles are a broad group & can be found in all three domains of life.  Found in salt marshes, subterranean salt deposits, dry soils, salted meats, hypersaline seas, and salt evaporation ponds.
  • 29. Unusual Habitats  A Pseudomonas species lives on a desert plant in the Negev Desert- the plant leaves secretes salt through salt glands.  A Bacillus species is found in the nasal cavities of desert iguanas- iguanas nasal cavities have salt glands which secrete KCl brine during osmotic stress.
  • 30. Osmoregulation  Halophiles maintain an internal osmotic potential that equals their external environment.  Osmosis is the process in which water moves from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
  • 31. Osmoregulation  In order for cells to maintain their water they must have an osmotic potential equal to their external environment.
  • 32. Osmoregulation  Halophiles have adapted to life at high salinity in many different ways.  Structural modification of external cell walls- posses negatively charged proteins on the outside which bind to positively charged sodium ions in their external environments & stabilizes the cell wall break down.
  • 33. “Salt-in” Strategy  Cells can have internal concentrations that are osmotically equivalent to their external environment.  This “salt-in” strategy is primarily used by aerobic, extremely halophilic archaea and anaerobic bacteria.  They maintain osmotically equivalent internal concentrations by accumulating high concentrations of potassium chloride.
  • 34. “Salt-in” Strategy  Potassium ions enter the cell passively via a uniporter. Sodium ions are pumped out. Chloride enters the cell against the membrane potential via cotransport with sodium ions.  For every three molecules of potassium chloride accumulated, two ATP are hydrolyzed making this strategy more energy efficient than the “compatible solute” strategy.
  • 35. “Salt-in” Strategy  To use this strategy all enzymes and structural cell components must be adapted to high salt concentrations to ensure proper cell function.
  • 36. Halobacterium: an extreme halophile  Halobacterium are members of domain archaea.  Widely researched for their extreme halophilism and unique structure.  Require salt concentrations between 15% to saturation to live.  Use the “salt-in” strategy.  Produce ATP by respiration or by bacteriorhodopsin.
  • 37. Halobacterium  May also have halorhodopsin that pumps chloride into the cell instead of pumping protons out.  The Red Sea was named after halobacterium that turns the water red during massive blooms.
  • 38. Facts  The term “red herring” comes from the foul smell of salted meats that were spoiled by halobacterium.  There have been considerable problems with halophiles colonizing leather during the salt curing process.
  • 39. Applications  The extraction of carotene from carotene rich halobacteria and halophilic algae that can then be used as food additives or as food-coloring agents.  The use of halophilic organisms in the fermentation of soy sauce and Thai fish sauce.
  • 40. Applications  Other possible applications being explored:  Increasing crude oil extraction (MEOR)  Genetically engineering halophilic enzymes encoding DNA into crops to allow for salt tolerance  Treatment of waste water (petroleum)
  • 41. Conclusions  Halophiles are salt tolerant organisms.  They are widespread and found in all three domains.  The “salt-in” strategy uses less energy but requires intracellular adaptations. Only a few prokaryotes use it.  All other halophiles use the “compatible solute” strategy that is energy expensive but does not require special adaptations.