Psychrophiles: Distribution, Ecology, Physiology, Metabolism, Cold Adapted Enzymes, and Proteins

Psychrophiles: Distribution, Ecology, Physiology, Metabolism, Cold Adapted Enzymes, and Proteins

Shreyas Anantray Bhatt
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-9144-4.ch005
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Abstract

Life on the Earth has evolved in the cold environments. Such cold habitats pose special challenges to the microbes in cold ecosystems, such as minimum metabolic activities, very limited nutrient availability, and often extreme conditions such as pH and salinity apart from temperature. Microbial communities surviving under these extreme conditions must have evolved complex structural and functional adaptations. Prokaryotic adaptations to cold environments are through physiological adaptations by increasing membrane fluidity through large amount of unsaturated fatty acids. These microbes also possess some cold adapted proteins whose steady state levels are maintained. They also produce certain compounds such as polyamines, sugars, polyols, amino acids, and some antifreeze proteins to protect themselves under freezing conditions. They also produce exopolymeric substances that promote adhesion of microbes to moist surfaces to induce biofilm formation which helps getting nutrients and protect the cells from harsh conditions. Antioxidants help destroying toxic reactive oxygen species.
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Habitat

It is well accepted that wherever there is possibility for existence of microbial life, it is found to exist. Microbes are found in very harsh environments of extremely halophilic conditions especially spore forming bacilli are found in a 250 million year old salt crystal. A bacterial spore has also been revived, cultured and identified from 40 million year old amber . Similarly microbial life has also been reported to be found at several kilometres of depth in the Earth’s crust and viable bacterial populations have been discovered at depths of 750 m in Pacific Ocean sites. Bacterial population can also grow and reproduce at ≤ 0 oC in the cloud droplet at high altitude.

Microbes might have existed in permanent ice cap some 14 million years ago and their descendants may live in sub glacial rock crevices, lakes and sediments. Some population of psychrophilic bacteria in deep antarctic ice in the absence of sunlight or oxygen at pressure up to 400 bars, at temperature well below 0oCand in strongly acidic or saline solutions.

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