| Literature DB >> 29534000 |
Paula M Tribelli1,2, Nancy I López3,4.
Abstract
It is well known that cold environments are predominant over the Earth and there are a great number of reports analyzing bacterial adaptations to cold. Most of these works are focused on characteristics traditionally involved in cold adaptation, such as the structural adjustment of enzymes, maintenance of membrane fluidity, expression of cold shock proteins and presence of compatible solutes. Recent works based mainly on novel "omic" technologies have presented evidence of the presence of other important features to thrive in cold. In this work, we analyze cold-adapted bacteria, looking for strategies involving novel features, and/or activation of non-classical metabolisms for a cold lifestyle. Metabolic traits related to energy generation, compounds and mechanisms involved in stress resistance and cold adaptation, as well as characteristics of the cell envelope, are analyzed in heterotrophic cold-adapted bacteria. In addition, metagenomic, metatranscriptomic and metaproteomic data are used to detect key functions in bacterial communities inhabiting cold environments.Entities:
Keywords: cell envelopes; cold-adapted bacterial communities; energy generation; polyhydroxyalkanoates; psychrophile
Year: 2018 PMID: 29534000 PMCID: PMC5871940 DOI: 10.3390/life8010008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Cold adaptive bacterial responses revealed by genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic studies.
| Bacterial Species | Metabolic Features | Increase of Membrane Fluidity | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TCA Repression or Shortened | Cytochrome Repression | Presence of Alternative Pathways | |||
| NI | X | X a | X | [ | |
| NI | NI | X a | X | [ | |
| X | X | X a | Decrease | [ | |
| X | X | NI | X | [ | |
| X | X | X c | NI | [ | |
| X | NI | X a | X | [ | |
| X | X | X b | X | [ | |
X: presence of the feature; NI: not informed; a: Glyoxylate and methyglyoxal pathways; b: Propionyl-CoA catabolism; c: Ethanol oxidation; TCA: tricarboxylic acid cycle.
Figure 1Mechanisms for cold adaptation. Available information regarding cold-adapted bacteria and microbial communities inhabiting cold environments shows that generalized and particular mechanisms could act in concert giving rise to cold adaptation profile of the entire community.