[Relationships between the osmoadaptation strategy, amino acid composition of total cellular protein, and properties of certain enzymes of haloalkaliphilic bacteria]
- PMID: 16871796
[Relationships between the osmoadaptation strategy, amino acid composition of total cellular protein, and properties of certain enzymes of haloalkaliphilic bacteria]
Abstract
Haloalkaliphilic microorganisms isolated from soda lakes were compared in terms of the amino acid composition of total cellular protein and the reaction of a number of key enzymes to salts and pH of the medium. In the extremely halophilic bacterium Natroniella acetigena (salt-inside osmoadaptation strategy), acidic amino acids (glutamic and aspartic) made up 30.91 mol % of the total of cellular protein amino acids. In the moderate haloalkaliphiles Tindallia magadiensis, Halomonas campisalis, and Halomonas sp. AIR-1 (compatible-solutes osmoadaptation strategy), the proportion of acidic amino acids (24.36, 23.15, and 23.58 mol %, respectively) was lower than in N. acetigena but higher than in the freshwater Acetobacterium paludosum (20.77 mol %). The excess of acidic amino acids over basic amino acids (lysine and arginine) increased with the degree of halophily. The enzymes of haloalkaliphiles proved to be tolerant to salts and high pH values, although the degree of tolerance varied. The activity of N. acetigena CO dehydrogenase was maximum in the presence of 0.7 M NaCl, but it was virtually independent of the NaHCO3 concentration. The hydrogenase and CO dehydrogenase of T. magadiensis exhibited maximum activity in the absence of NaCl; the CO dehydrogenase was most active at 0.25 M NaHCO3, and hydrogenase activity was only weakly dependent on NaHCO3 in the concentration range of 0-1.2 M. The nitrate reductases of H. campisalis and Halomonas sp. AIR-2 were active in broad ranges of NaCl and KCl concentrations; the activity maxima were recorded at moderate concentrations of these salts. The pH optima of most of the studied enzymes of haloalkaliphiles were in the alkaline zone. Thus, it was shown that the amino acid composition of total cellular protein is determined by the osmoadaptation strategy employed by the bacterium. A correlation was found between the salt tolerance of enzymes and the proportion of acidic amino acids in the total cellular protein. The ability of enzymes to function at high pH values is one of the mechanisms of adaptation of microorganisms to high pH values.
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