Proceedings of the Microbiological Society of Korea Conference (한국미생물학회:학술대회논문집)
- 2007.05a
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- Pages.80-82
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- 2007
Diversity of Deep-sea Piezophiles and Their Molecular Adaptations to High-pressure Environment
- Kato, Chiaki (Extremobiosphere Research Center, Japan Agency for marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)) ;
- Sato, Takako (Extremobiosphere Research Center, Japan Agency for marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC)) ;
- Tamegai, Hideyuki (Department of Chemistry and Environmental Technology, School of Engineering, Kinki University) ;
- Nakasone, Kaoru (Department of Chemistry, College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University)
- Published : 2007.05.10
Abstract
We have isolated numerous cold deep-sea adapted microorganisms (piezophilic, formerly referred to as "barophilic" bacteria) using deep-sea research submersibles. Many of the isolates are novel psychrophilic bacteria, and we have identified several new piezophilic species, i.e., Photobacterium profundum, Shewanella violacea, Moritella japonica, Moritella yayanosii, Psychromonas kaikoi, and Colwellia piezophila. These piezophiles are involving to five genera in gamma-Proteobacteria subgroup and produce significant amounts of unsaturated fatty acids in their cell membrane fractions to maintain the membrane fluidity in cold and high-pressure environments. Piezophilic microorganisms have been identified in many deep-sea bottoms of many of the world oceans. Therefore, these microbes are well distributed on our planet. One of the isolated deep-sea piezophiles, Shewanella violacea strain DSS12 is a psychrophilic, moderately piezophilic bacterium from a sediment sample collected at the Ryukyu Trench (depth: 5,110 m), which grows optimally at 30 MPa and
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