| Literature DB >> 20631870 |
Annarita Poli1, Gianluca Anzelmo, Barbara Nicolaus.
Abstract
Many marine bacteria produce exopolysaccharides (EPS) as a strategy for growth, adhering to solid surfaces, and to survive adverse conditions. There is growing interest in isolating new EPS producing bacteria from marine environments, particularly from extreme marine environments such as deep-sea hydrothermal vents characterized by high pressure and temperature and heavy metal presence. Marine EPS-producing microorganisms have been also isolated from several extreme niches such as the cold marine environments typically of Arctic and Antarctic sea ice, characterized by low temperature and low nutrient concentration, and the hypersaline marine environment found in a wide variety of aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems such as salt lakes and salterns. Most of their EPSs are heteropolysaccharides containing three or four different monosaccharides arranged in groups of 10 or less to form the repeating units. These polymers are often linear with an average molecular weight ranging from 1 x 10(5) to 3 x 10(5) Da. Some EPS are neutral macromolecules, but the majority of them are polyanionic for the presence of uronic acids or ketal-linked pyruvate or inorganic residues such as phosphate or sulfate. EPSs, forming a layer surrounding the cell, provide an effective protection against high or low temperature and salinity, or against possible predators. By examining their structure and chemical-physical characteristics it is possible to gain insight into their commercial application, and they are employed in several industries. Indeed EPSs produced by microorganisms from extreme habitats show biotechnological promise ranging from pharmaceutical industries, for their immunomodulatory and antiviral effects, bone regeneration and cicatrizing capacity, to food-processing industries for their peculiar gelling and thickening properties. Moreover, some EPSs are employed as biosurfactants and in detoxification mechanisms of petrochemical oil-polluted areas. The aim of this paper is to give an overview of current knowledge on EPSs produced by marine bacteria including symbiotic marine EPS-producing bacteria isolated from some marine annelid worms that live in extreme niches.Entities:
Keywords: biological activity; chemical composition; exopolysaccharides; extremophiles; marine bacteria
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20631870 PMCID: PMC2901825 DOI: 10.3390/md8061779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
EPSs produced by microorganisms isolated from marine hot springs and hydrothermal vents.
| Microorganisms | Source Environment | Description of EPS and Chemical Composition | Suggested Ecological Role and Biotechnological Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deep-sea hydrothermal vent | Octasaccharide repeating unit with two side chains, ( | Gelling properties | [ | |
| Deep-sea hydrothermal vent, North Fijian Basin | Sulfated heteropolysaccharide, high uronic acids with pyruvate. The repeating unit is a branched hexasaccharide containing Glc, Man, Gal, GlcA, GalA, pyruvated mannose | Thickening agent in food- processing industry, biotoxification and waste- water treatment, bone healing, treatment of cardiovascular diseases | [ | |
| Shallow submarine thermal spring | Man is the only monosaccharide | Biofilm formation | [ | |
| Sediment in marine hot spring near the seashore of Maronti, Ischia Island, Italy | A pentasaccharide repeating unit (two of them with a gluco-galacto configuration and three with a | Pharmaceutical application | [ | |
| Water of a shallow hydrothermal vent, Vulcano Island, Italy | Trisaccharide repeating unit and a | Immunomodulatory and antiviral activities | [ | |
| Water of a shallow marine hot spring, Vulcano Island, Italy | Man is the main monosaccharide. Tetrasaccharide repeating unit and a | Antiviral activity | [ |
Figure 1The repeating unit of EPS secreted by Pseudoalteromonas strain 721 [39].
Figure 2Schematic steps involved in the studies of Geobacillus strain 4004 EPS [48].
EPSs produced by microorganisms isolated from cold marine environments.
| Microorganisms | Source environment | Description of EPS and Chemical composition | Suggested Ecological Role and Biotechnological Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deep-sea sediment in the Bohai Gulf, gulf of the Yellow Sea, China | Linear arrangement of α-(1→6) linkage of glucose with a high degree of acetylation | Flocculation behavior and bio-sorption capacity | [ | |
| Isolated from particles collected in melted Antarctic sea | Sulfated heteropolysaccharide, high levels of uronic acids with acetyl groups Glc:GalA:Rha:Gal (1:0.5:0.1:0.08) | Cryoprotection | [ | |
| Isolated from particles captured by a plankton net towed through the Southern Ocean | Sulfated heteropolysaccharide, high levels of uronic acids with acetyl and succinyl groups GalA:Glc:Man:GalNAc:Ara (1:0.8:0.84:0.36:0.13) | Trace metal binding | [ | |
| Arctic marine sediments | n.r. | Cryoprotection | [ |
n.r. not reported.
EPSs produced by microorganisms isolated from hypersaline marine environments.
| Microorganisms | Source environment | Description of EPS and Chemical composition | Suggested ecological role and Potential Biotechnological Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mediterranean Sea | →4)-β-D-Glc | Candidate in oil recovery, especially in oil deposits with high salinity concentrations | [ | |
| Marine sediment sample collected from Marado, Cheju Island, Republic of Korea | EPS named EPS-R Glc:Gal (0.68:1.0) | Biosurfactant and detoxification of polluted areas from petrochemical oils | [ | |
| Salt lake in Cape Russell in Antarctica | Glc:Fru:GlcN:GalN (1.0:0.7:0.3:trace) | High viscosity | [ |
EPSs produced by marine microorganisms involved in symbiotic relationships.
| Microorganisms | Source environment | Description of EPS and Chemical composition | Suggested ecological role and Potential Biotechnological Application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isolated from epidermis of a polychaete annelid, | The repeating unit is an undesaccharide with three side-chains. Gal:Glc:Rha:Fuc:Man:GlcA:GalA:3-0-(1 carboxyethyl)-D-GlcA (1:0.42:0.85:0.5:0.42:0.5:0.5:0.5) | Cosmetics (patent PCT 94907582-4) | [ | |
| Isolated from | Main chain of five sugars with a side chain of three sugars including a dicarboxylic acid. Glc:Gal:GlcA:3Lac-GlcA:GalA | Heavy metal binding | [ | |
| Isolated from a Pompei worm tube collected from a deep-sea hydrothermal field of the East Pacific Rise | A linear tetrasaccharide repeating unit. Uronic acid :GlcN:GalN 1:0.5:0.5 →3)-β-D-Glc | Bone regeneration and cicatrizing material (patent US 7015206B2) | [ | |
| Isolated from a fluid sample collected among a dense population of | Glc:Gal:GlcA:GalA (1:1:0.7:0.4) | Anticoagulant activity | [ |