Literature DB >> 2113915

Hyperthermus butylicus, a hyperthermophilic sulfur-reducing archaebacterium that ferments peptides.

W Zillig1, I Holz, D Janekovic, H P Klenk, E Imsel, J Trent, S Wunderl, V H Forjaz, R Coutinho, T Ferreira.   

Abstract

The hyperthermophilic peptide-fermenting sulfur archaebacterium Hyperthermus butylicus was isolated from the sea floor of a solfataric habitat with temperatures of up to 112 degrees C on the coast of the island of São Miguel, Azores. The organism grows at up to 108 degrees C, grows optimally between 95 and 106 degrees C at 17 g of NaCl per liter and pH 7.0, utilizes peptide mixtures as carbon and energy sources, and forms H2S from elemental sulfur and molecular hydrogen as a growth-stimulating accessory energy source but not by sulfur respiration. The same fermentation products, CO2, 1-butanol, acetic acid, phenylacetic acid, and a trace of hydroxyphenylacetic acid, are formed both with and without of S0 and H2. Its ether lipids, the absence of a mureine sacculus, the nature of the DNA-dependent RNA polymerase, and phylogenetic classification by DNA-rRNA cross-hybridization characterize H. butylicus as part of a novel genus of the major branch of archaebacteria comprising the orders Thermoproteales and Sulfolobales, representing a particularly long lineage bifurcating with the order Sulfolobales above the branching off of the genus Thermoproteus and distinct from the genera Desulfurococcus and Pyrodictium.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2113915      PMCID: PMC213380          DOI: 10.1128/jb.172.7.3959-3965.1990

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bacteriol        ISSN: 0021-9193            Impact factor:   3.490


  12 in total

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Journal:  Eur J Biochem       Date:  1982-03-01

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  48 in total

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5.  An expansion of age constraints for microbial clades that lack a conventional fossil record using phylogenomic dating.

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6.  Aerobically respiring prokaryotic strains exhibit a broader temperature-pH-salinity space for cell division than anaerobically respiring and fermentative strains.

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7.  An intergenic stem-loop mutation in the Bacillus subtilis ccpA-motPS operon increases motPS transcription and the MotPS contribution to motility.

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Review 8.  The legacy of Carl Woese and Wolfram Zillig: from phylogeny to landmark discoveries.

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9.  Marinobacter alkaliphilus sp. nov., a novel alkaliphilic bacterium isolated from subseafloor alkaline serpentine mud from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1200 at South Chamorro Seamount, Mariana Forearc.

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10.  Methanococcus thermolithotrophicus Isolated from North Sea Oil Field Reservoir Water.

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