Acidophile (organisms)

Acidophile (organisms)

Acidophilic organisms are those that thrive under highly acidic conditions (usually at pH 2.0 or below) . These organisms can be found in different branches of the tree of life, including Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukaryotes. A partial list of these organisms will include:

:Archaea:* Sulfolobales, an order in the Crenarchaeota branchhttp://141.150.157.117:8080/prokPUB/index.htm ] of Archaea:* Thermoplasmatales, an order in the Euryarchaeota branch of Archaea:* ARMAN, in the Euryarchaeota branch of Archaea:* "Acidianus brierleyi, A. infernus", facultatively anaerobic thermoacidophilic archaebacteria:* "Metallosphaera sedula", thermoacidophilic

:Bacteria:* Acidobacterium [Quaiser "et al.", Mol. Micro. 50, p.563.] , a phylum of Bacteria:* Acidithiobacillales, an order of Proteobacteria e.g. "A.ferrooxidans, A. thiooxidans":*"Thiobacillus prosperus, T. acidophilus, T. organovorus, T. cuprinus" :*"Acetobacter aceti", a bacterium that produces acetic acid (vinegar) from the oxidation of ethanol.

Mechanisms of adaptation to acidic environments

Most acidophilic organisms have evolved extremely efficient mechanisms to pump protons out of the intracellular space in order to keep the cytoplasm at or near neutral pH. Therefore, intracellular proteins do not need to develop acid stability through evolution. However, other acidophiles, such as "Acetobacter aceti", have an acidified cytoplasm which forces nearly all proteins in the genome to evolve acid stability [cite journal
author=Menzel, U.; Gottschalk, G.
year=1985
volume=143
title=The internal pH of "Acetobacterium wieringae" and "Acetobacter aceti" during growth and production of acetic acid
journal=Arch Microbiol
pages=47–51
doi=10.1007/BF00414767
] . For this reason, "Acetobacter aceti" has become a valuable resource for understanding the mechanisms by which proteins can attain acid stability.

Studies of proteins adapted to low pH have revealed a few general mechanisms by which proteins can achieve acid stability. In most acid stable proteins (such as pepsin and the soxF protein from "Sulfolobus acidocaldarius"), there is an overabundance of acidic residues which minimizes low pH destabilization induced by a buildup of positive charge. Other mechanisms include minimization of solvent accessibility of acidic residues or binding of metal cofactors. In a specialized case of acid stability, the NAPase protein from "Nocardiopsis alba" was shown to have relocated acid-sensitive salt bridges to regions that play an important role in the unfolding process. In this case of kinetic acid stability, protein longevity is accomplished across a wide range of pH.

References

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* cite journal
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* cite journal
author=Kelch, B. A.
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