| Literature DB >> 25854643 |
Gabriel Zamith Leal Dalmaso1,2, Davis Ferreira3, Alane Beatriz Vermelho4.
Abstract
The marine environment covers almost three quarters of the planet and is where evolution took its first steps. Extremophile microorganisms are found in several extreme marine environments, such as hydrothermal vents, hot springs, salty lakes and deep-sea floors. The ability of these microorganisms to support extremes of temperature, salinity and pressure demonstrates their great potential for biotechnological processes. Hydrolases including amylases, cellulases, peptidases and lipases from hyperthermophiles, psychrophiles, halophiles and piezophiles have been investigated for these reasons. Extremozymes are adapted to work in harsh physical-chemical conditions and their use in various industrial applications such as the biofuel, pharmaceutical, fine chemicals and food industries has increased. The understanding of the specific factors that confer the ability to withstand extreme habitats on such enzymes has become a priority for their biotechnological use. The most studied marine extremophiles are prokaryotes and in this review, we present the most studied archaea and bacteria extremophiles and their hydrolases, and discuss their use for industrial applications.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25854643 PMCID: PMC4413194 DOI: 10.3390/md13041925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree showing the extremophiles and the resistant characteristics that appear in at least one species of each genera, identified with the color code. The phylogenetic tree was based on Woese et al. [28], Lang et al. [29] and Dereeper et al. [30]. The * indicates the phylogenetic branch that were according to Lang et al. [29].
Extremophile microorganisms and their environments (adapted from Horikoshi and Bull [17]).
| Extremophile Microorganism | Favorable Environment to Growth |
|---|---|
| Acidophile | Optimum pH for growth—Below 3 |
| Alkaliphile | Optimum pH for growth—Above 10 |
| Halophile | Requires at least 1M salt for growth |
| Hyperthermophile | Optimum growth at temperatures above 80 °C |
| Thermophile | Grows at temperatures between 60 °C and 85 °C |
| Eurypsychrophile (psychrotolerant) | Grows at temperatures above 25 °C, but also grow bellow 15 °C |
| Stenopsychrophile (psychrophile) | Grows at temperatures between 10 °C and 20 °C |
| Piezophile | Grows under high pressure—Above 400 atm (40 MPa) |
| Endolithic | Grows inside rocks |
| Hipolith | Grows on rocks and cold deserts |
| Oligotroph | Able to grow in environments of scarce nutrients |
| Radioresistant | Tolerance to high doses of radiation |
| Metallotolerant | Tolerance to high levels of heavy metals |
| Toxitolerant | Tolerates high concentrations of toxic agents (eg. Organic solvents) |
| Xerophile | Grows in low water availability, resistant to desiccation |
Classification of Amylases.
| Enzyme | Classification | Cleavage | Product | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| α-amylases | EC 3.2.1.1 | Internal α-1,4 | Dextrins | ||
| β-amylase or maltase | EC 3.2.1.2 | Outer regions of α-1,4 | Maltose | ||
| Glucoamylase | EC3.2.1.3 | β-cyclodextrin and glucose | |||
| α-glucosidase | EC 3.2.1.20 | ||||
| Pullulanases | EC 3.2.1.41 | α-1,6 linkages | Maltotriose | ||
| Isoamylases | EC 3.2.1.68 | Pullulan | Malto-oligosaccharides | ||
| Dextrinases | EC 3.2.1.142 | α-1,6 linkages | Maltose |
Figure 2The three major amylolytic enzymes [5].
Extreme amylases from marine extremophiles.
| Microorganism | Domain | Natural Isolation Site | Metabolism | Enzyme | Type | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Archaea | Thermal marine sediments | Hyperthermophile | Amylase Endoamylase | α-amylase | [ | |
| Bacteria | Hot springs, Azores islands | Hyperthermophile | Amylase debranching | Pullulanase type I | [ | |
| Bacteria | Antarctica | Psycrophille | Amylase Endoamylas | α-amylase | [ | |
| Bacteria | Tunisian salt lake | Halophile/poliextremophile | Amylase Endoamylase | α amylase | [ | |
| Archaea | Saltern, Spain | Extreme halophile | Amylase Endoamylase | a-amylase | [ |
Classification of cell wall-degrading hydrolases.
| Enzyme | Classification | Cleavage | Product | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endo-β-1,4-glucanase | EC 3.2.1.4 | Intramolecular bonds of β-1,4-glycosidic | New chain ends | ||
| β-glucosidase | EC 3.2.1.21 | Ends of the cellulose | Glucose or soluble cellulose | ||
| Exo-β-1,4-glucan cellobiohydrolase | EC 3.2.1.91 | Glycosidic terminals | Cellobiose | ||
| β-1,4-endoxylanase | EC 3.2.1.8 | Internal glycosidic linkages along heteroxylan main skeleton | Polymerization degree of the substrate | ||
| α-D-xylosidase | EC 3.2.1.177 | Small xylo-oligosaccharides and xylobiose | Xylose |
Figure 3(A) Enzymes involved in the hydrolysis of cellulose and (B) in xylan hydrolysis [183]. Exo-β-1,4-glucanase and cellobiohydrolase hydrolyze the glycosidic terminals releasing cellobiose units. The β-glucosidases act directly on cellulose, hydrolyzing it to glucose. The 1,4-β-glucosidase is essential to complete the hydrolysis process of the cellulose [5]. The α-d-xylosidases are exoglycosidases that act in the non-reducing end, hydrolyzing small xylo-oligosaccharides and xylobioses, releasing xylose.
Figure 4The classifications of peptidases [5].
Peptidases from marine extremophiles.
| Peptidase | Extremophile | Habitats | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serine peptidase | Hot spring | [ | |
| Volcanic hot spring | [ | ||
| Deep-sea hydrothermal vent Shallow submarine thermal springs and oil wells | [ | ||
| Geothermal hot stream at Sileri on Java island, Indonesia | [ | ||
| Cysteine peptidase | [ | ||
| Dead Sea, the Great Salt Lake, and oceanic environments with high NaCl | [ | ||
| Metallocarboxypeptidase | Deep-sea hydrothermal chimneys | [ |
Lipases and esterases according the Nomenclature Committee of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (NC-IUBMB) [145].
| Lipases | Systematic Name | E.C. | Reaction Catalysed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carboxylesterase (other names: Esterases, serina esterases, | Carboxylesterase | 3.1.1.1 | carboxylic ester + H2O = alcohol + carboxylate |
| Triacylglycerol lipase (other names: Lipase; triglyceride lipase, | Triacylglycerol acylhydrolase | 3.1.1.3 | triacylglycerol + H2O = diacylglycerol + carboxylate |
Lipases and esterases from psychrophiles.
| Prokaryote | Habitat | Lipase/Esterase | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marine sediments that are permanently cold | Esterase | [ | |
| Marine Antarctic | Lipase | [ | |
| Deep-sea sediments | Lipase | [ | |
| Cold marine environments including Arctic and Antarctic sea ice | Lipase | [ |