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  • Key words Hydrostatic pressure  (1)
  • Pyrococcus  (1)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Archaea ; Hyperthermophile ; Hydrostatic pressure ; Pyrococcus ; Deep-sea vent
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A novel, hyperthermophilic, anaerobic, sulfurmetabolizing archaeon was isolated from a fluid sample from recently discovered hydrothermal vents in the North Fiji basin (SW Pacific), at 2000 m depth. The new organism, strain GE5, is a gram-negative, highly motile coccus. It grows between 67° and 102°C under atmospheric pressure, with an optimum at 96°C (doubling time 33 min). The upper growth temperature is extended by at least 3°C when cells are cultivated under in situ hydrostatic pressures (20 MPa). Strain GE5 is an obligate heterotroph, fermenting peptides, or mixtures of amino acids to acetate, isovalerate, isobutyrate, propionate, H2 and CO2. Hydrogen inhibits growth unless sulfur is present. In the presence of sulfur, H2S is then produced. Phylogenetic analyses of the 16 S rRNA sequence of strain GE5 places the new isolate within the Thermococcales. By its high growth temperature and physiological features the new isolate ressembles Pyrococcus sp. However it deffers by a 7% mol upper G+C-content and shows low level of DNA similarity with the two previously described species. Based on these differences the description of strain GE5 as a new species Pyrococcus abyssi (CNCM I-1302) is proposed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1433-4909
    Keywords: Key words Hydrostatic pressure ; Hyperthermophile ; DNA-dependent DNA polymerase ; Protein stability ; Thermostability
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract DNA polymerases derived from three thermophilic microorganisms, Pyrococcus strain ES4, Pyrococcus furiosus, and Thermus aquaticus, were stabilized in vitro by hydrostatic pressure at denaturing temperatures of 111°C, 107.5°C, and 100°C (respectively). Inactivation rates, as determined by enzyme activity measurements, were measured at 3, 45, and 89 MPa. Half-lives of P. strain ES4, P. furiosus, and T. aquaticus DNA polymerases increased from 5.0, 6.9, and 5.2 minutes (respectively) at 3 MPa to 12, 36, and 13 minutes (respectively) at 45 MPa. A pressure of 89 MPa further increased the half-lives of P. strain ES4 and T. aquaticus DNA polymerases to 26 and 39 minutes, while the half-life of P. furiosus DNA polymerase did not increase significantly from that at 45 MPa. The decay constant for P. strain ES4 and T. aquaticus polymerases decreased exponentially with increasing pressure, reflecting an observed change in volume for enzyme inactivation of 61 and 73 cm3/mol, respectively. Stabilization by pressure may result from pressure effects on thermal unfolding or pressure retardation of unimolecular inactivation of the unfolded state. Regardless of the mechanism, pressure stabilization of proteins could explain the previously observed extension of the maximum temperature for survival of P. strain ES4 and increase the survival of thermophiles in thermally variable deep-sea environments such as hydrothermal vents.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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